Home BP monitoring was initially rolled out during covid however there have been identified benefits for both clinicians and women accessing this service which have extended post covid pandemic (Scottish perinatal pandemic (2020)
Raised blood pressure (BP) hypertensive disorders in a pregnancy can affect around approximately 8 to 10 % of pregnancies worldwide and can be diagnosed as essential hypertension, chronic hypertension or gestational hypertension.
Early detection of raised BP and pre-eclampsia is paramount in pregnancy. 1-5 in 100 pregnancies will develop pre-eclampsia (RCOG) early detection is paramount. RCOG have identified within that there are no issues around safety of home BP monitoring and it is an acceptable means of monitoring with benefits, it’s no less accurate than when carried out by a clinician. https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/2020-03-30-self-monitoring-of-blood-pressure-in-pregnancy.pdf
Home BP monitoring can reduce the impact of hospital visits, admissions and it doesn’t compromise pregnancy outcomes https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29468771/


