TY - JOUR T1 - Should we tell them when their blood pressure is up? JF - Canadian Medical Association Journal JO - CMAJ SP - 409 LP - 415 VL - 141 IS - 5 AU - W. Linden AU - C. P. Herbert AU - A. Jenkins AU - V. Raffle Y1 - 1989/09/01 UR - http://www.cmaj.ca/content/141/5/409.abstract N2 - We carried out two studies to determine the effects of feedback on subsequent blood pressure and heart rate readings in subjects without significant cardiovascular abnormalities. In both studies the subjects were randomly assigned to be told that their blood pressure was normal or was high or to receive no feedback at all; 3 minutes later another reading was taken and correct feedback provided. Study 1 was done in 114 patients who attended a family practice teaching unit for an office visit; subjects taking cardioactive medication or with chronically elevated blood pressure (diastolic pressure more than 95 mm Hg) or known low pressure (diastolic pressure less than 60 mm Hg) were excluded. Half of the subjects received feedback from a nurse and the other half from a physician. We found no effect of type of feedback or type of practitioner on subsequent readings. No adaptation of diastolic blood pressure or heart rate took place, whereas a similar rest period in the laboratory consistently triggers cardiovascular adaptation. Given the field nature of the study it was not clear whether the intervention was not powerful or whether the practitioner-patient interactions diffused the effects of an otherwise powerful intervention. Therefore, a second study with the same design was carried out in a controlled laboratory setting with 61 university students who believed they were in the adaptation phase of an experimental stress protocol. The subjects did not interact with the experimenter, who provided only the initial feedback, via intercom. The findings replicated those of study 1: type of feedback had no significant effect on subsequent blood pressure levels, and all types of feedback prevented cardiovascular adaptation. We recommend that patients be allowed to rest alone for at least 10 minutes before blood pressure is measured. Our findings suggest that practitioners need not be concerned about telling normotensive or borderline hypertensive patients that their blood pressure is elevated. ER -