Our results provide no evidence of superiority for treatment with calcium channel blockers or angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors compared with a thiazide-type diuretic during first-step antihypertensive therapy in DM, IFG, or NG.
A randomized, controlled, multicenter trial assigned well-controlled hypertensive participants ≥55 years, with moderate hypercholesterolemia to receive pravastatin (n=5170) or usual care (n=5185) for 4-8 years, when trial therapy was discontinued. Passive surveillance using national databases to ascertain deaths and hospitalizations continued for total follow-up of 8-13 years to assess whether mortality and morbidity differences persisted or new differences developed. During the post-trial period, fatal and nonfatal outcomes were available for 98% and 64% of participants, respectively. Primary outcome was all-cause mortality; secondary outcomes included cardiovascular mortality, coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, heart failure, cardiovascular disease, and end-stage renal disease. No significant differences appeared in mortality for pravastatin versus usual care (hazard ratio [HR], 0.96; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.89-1.03), or other secondary outcomes. Similar to the previously reported in-trial result, there was a significant treatment effect for CHD in Blacks (HR, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.64-0.98). However, the in-trial result showing a significant treatment by race effect did not remain significant over the entire follow-up (P=.08). These findings are consistent with evidence from other large trials that show statins prevent CHD and add evidence that they are effective for CHD prevention in Blacks.
Coumadin is the most dangerous medicine in common use in primary care medicine as well as in the correctional setting. In the Maryland Division of Correction's Eastern Correctional Institution, a multivendor collaboration between the medical director and a clinical pharmacist maintained a point-of-care, finger stick international normalized ratio determination using a portable monitor. With an anticoagulation clinic protocol as a guide, changes are considered in the Coumadin dosage and made through the usual procedure. Results are recorded in an electronic patient health record and tracked in a database that shows the current data page as well as updated historical data for each inmate.
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