Abstract:
The past 5-year data from 222 randomly selected outpatient cards of
hypertensive patients who were followed up at a family polyclinic (n=54) and in a
number of rural ambulances (n=168) of the Republic of Uzbekistan were
retrospectively analyzed. The physicians from the Tashkent family polyclinic and
rural ambulances of a number of the Republic’s regions, who had taken 10-month
retraining courses for general practitioners, were questioned. Two hundred and fiftysix hypertensive patients followed up at the family hospital and rural ambulances
were interviewed using questionnaires and examined. Then some of them (a study
group) took a course of training at a school for the hypertensive patient and the others
(a comparison group) did not participate in the education program. All the patients
were followed up for 2 years with a subsequent reexamination and study. Most
outpatient cards give recommendations for non-drug treatment incompletely. In a
number of cases, the physicians who attach importance to the detection and
correction of risk factors have substantially increased after education. The patients
who had taken training courses were found to be significantly (р<0,001) more aware
of their having hypertension and the major risk factors of hypertensive disease, to be
more adherent to treatment, and to know its adequacy.