Cost-Effectiveness of Hypertension Treatment by Pharmacists in Black Barbershops

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Abstract

Background: In LABBPS (Los Angeles Barbershop Blood Pressure Study), pharmacist-led hypertension care in Los Angeles County Black-owned barbershops significantly improved blood pressure control in non-Hispanic Black men with uncontrolled hypertension at baseline. In this analysis, 10-year health outcomes and health care costs of 1 year of the LABBPS intervention versus control are projected. Methods: A discrete event simulation of hypertension care processes projected blood pressure, medication-related adverse events, fatal and nonfatal cardiovascular disease events, and noncardiovascular disease death in LABBPS participants. Program costs, total direct health care costs (2019 US dollars), and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were estimated for the LABBPS intervention and control arms from a health care sector perspective over a 10-year horizon. Future costs and QALYs were discounted 3% annually. High and intermediate cost-effectiveness thresholds were defined as

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Bryant, K. B., Moran, A. E., Kazi, D. S., Zhang, Y., Penko, J., Ruiz-Negrón, N., … Bellows, B. K. (2021). Cost-Effectiveness of Hypertension Treatment by Pharmacists in Black Barbershops. Circulation, 143(24), 2384–2394. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.120.051683

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