RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Delivering integrated hypertension care at private health facilities in urban Pakistan: a process evaluation JF BJGP Open JO BJGP Open FD Royal College of General Practitioners SP bjgpopen18X101613 DO 10.3399/bjgpopen18X101613 VO 2 IS 4 A1 Muhammad Amir Khan A1 John D Walley A1 Nida Khan A1 Muhammad Ahmar Khan A1 Saima Ali A1 Rebecca King A1 Shaheer Ellahi Khan A1 Faisal Imtiaz Sheikh A1 Farooq Manzoor A1 Haroon Jehangir Khan YR 2018 UL http://bjgpopen.org/content/2/4/bjgpopen18X101613.abstract AB Background In Pakistan about 18% of all adults are affected by hypertension, and only one in eight of the prevalent cases have their hypertension controlled. As in many other low-middle income countries, a public–private partnership approach is being considered for delivering non-communicable disease care in urban areas.Aim This process evaluation was undertaken to understand how an integrated care intervention was experienced by the care providers and patients, and to inform modifications before possible scaling.Design & setting The mixed-methods study was conducted as part of a cluster randomised trial on integrated hypertension care at 26 private clinics.Method The care practices were assessed by analysing the clinical records of 1138 registered patients with hypertension. Then semi-structured interviews with service providers and patients were used to understand their respective care experiences. A framework approach was applied to analyse and interpret the qualitative data.Results District-led objective selection and context-sensitive staff training helped to get the clinics engaged in partnership working. About one-third of patients with hypertension had associated diabetes or renal compromise. The prescription of drugs is influenced by multiple non-clinical considerations of providers and patients. Many doctors allowed the use of home-based remedies as supplements to the prescribed allopathic drugs. Female patients faced more challenges in managing lifestyle changes. The intervention improved adherence to follow-up visits, but patient attrition remained a challenge.Conclusion The integrated hypertension care intervention at private clinics is feasible, and leads to improved diagnosis and treatment in low-income country urban setting. The authors recommend continued implementation research and informed scaling of hypertension care at private clinics.