Introduction: Blood pressure measurement in clinical care settings seldom follows the protocol recommended by national guidelines, potentially leading to overestimates or underestimates of blood pressure control. We evaluated blood pressure measurement methods as a source of bias in determining blood pressure control among community- dwelling adults with diabetes. Methods: In a community-based trial of patients with diabetes, we measured both "clinical blood pressure" (clinical BP) (taken by a community nurse or medical assistant instructed to "take the participant's blood pressure like you do in your own clinic") and "research blood pressure" (research BP) (research staff followed a guideline-concordant protocol). Each participant had both types of blood pressure assessment on the same day over the course of 2 hours. Results: The 227 participants had a mean age of 59 years; 86% were black and 74% were women. The mean clinical BP was 5 mm Hg higher than the mean research BP for systolic blood pressure (P < .001) and 2 mm Hg higher for diastolic blood pressure (P
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Sewell, K., Halanych, J. H., Russell, L. B., Andreae, S. J., Cherrington, A. L., Martin, M. Y., … Safford, M. M. (2016). Blood pressure measurement biases in clinical settings, Alabama, 2010-2011. Preventing Chronic Disease, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.5888/pcd13.150348
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