Integrative and complementary healthcare practices for hypertension: a summary of recommended clinical guidelines.
Marcus Tolentino Silva, Daniel Miele Amado, Paulo Roberto Sousa Rocha, Jorge Otávio Maia Barreto
Epidemiologia e servicos de saude : revista do Sistema Unico de Saude do Brasil January 1, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1590/s2237-96222025v34e20240844.en via PubMed
Summary
Integrative and complementary healthcare practices (ICPHPs), such as meditation, yoga, and tai chi, are commonly recommended for managing systemic arterial hypertension in adults. Eight clinical guidelines reviewed indicated these practices positively impact blood pressure, stress control, and quality of life. Most guidelines provided moderate quality evidence supporting these interventions with strong recommendations, suggesting a holistic approach to hypertension management.
Study at a glance
| Design | systematic review |
|---|---|
| Population | adults with systemic arterial hypertension |
| Key finding | Integrative and complementary healthcare practices are effective and safe strategies for the complementary management of hypertension. |
Abstract
Identifying the main uses of integrative and complementary healthcare practices (ICPHPs) in managing systemic arterial hypertension in adults. Evidence summary. With eligibility criteria for the clinical guidelines from the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation system and others that addressed ICPHPs hypertension, with no language or date restrictions. Medline, Embase and Scopus were the databases consulted. The Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation II tool was used for risk of bias assessment, focusing on methodological rigor. The results were then summarized narratively, grouping the recommendations by outcome and analyzing commonalities and differences between the included guidelines. Eight clinical guidelines were included in this evidence summary, selected from 560 records initially identified. The most common interventions were meditation, yoga, breathing techniques, tai chi and mindfulness, with a positive impact on blood pressure, stress control and patients' quality of life. Most guidelines recommended these practices for hypertension control, based on moderate quality evidence with a strong recommendation. The results of this summary indicate that HCPs are effective and safe strategies in the complementary management for hypertension, suggesting a more holistic and less medicalized approach to managing the condition.