# Readiness to deliver integrated cardiovascular, kidney and metabolic care in primary healthcare: phase II of HEARTS 2.0 in 26 countries in the Americas

**Authors:** Pedro Ordunez, Andres Rosende, Jeffrey Brettler, Esteban Londono, Patrick Van der Stuyft, Ramon Martinez-Piedra, Libardo Rodriguez, Mariana Lisbeth Rodriguez de la Cerda, Kerry-Ann Renaud-Thomas, Vicente Aleixandre Benites-Zapata, Yadexy Carbay, Maria Clapperton, Miguel Angel Diaz Aguilera, Roxana Salamanca Kacic, Leeann Sills, Salvador Tamayo Muñiz, Hannah Carolina Tavares Domingos, Jerry Toelsie, Yamile Valdes Gonzalez, Natalia Vensentini, Matias Villatoro, Sonia Angell

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2025-021298 · 2026-01-14

## TL;DR

This study assesses the readiness of 26 countries in the Americas to implement integrated care for cardiovascular, kidney, and metabolic conditions through the HEARTS 2.0 initiative.

## Contribution

The study provides a cross-country assessment of feasibility and barriers for implementing 45 evidence-based interventions in primary healthcare.

## Key findings

- Many interventions are considered feasible, but availability is limited due to shortages of diagnostics, medicines, and infrastructure.
- 18 countries plan to implement over 30 of the 45 interventions within the next 3 years.
- Primary health systems in most countries are not yet ready for integrated care, but HEARTS 2.0 offers a strong opportunity for progress.

## Abstract

WHO’s Global HEARTS is the largest worldwide effort to improve hypertension control through standardised care. HEARTS in the Americas is its regional adaptation. To address the rising burden of cardiovascular, kidney and metabolic conditions, the initiative launched HEARTS 2.0, aiming to promote integrated care, reduce fragmentation and improve quality, access and health outcomes. In phase I, an expert-led consensus identified 45 evidence-based interventions for inclusion in an expanded Clinical Pathway. This report presents findings from phase II on the readiness of 26 Latin American and Caribbean countries to implement these interventions. We used a cross-sectional design and a structured, self-administered questionnaire completed by national implementation teams. It systematically assessed the availability, feasibility, time required and key barriers for each proposed intervention. While many interventions, especially for risk assessment and non-pharmacological treatments, are considered feasible in many countries, their current availability is limited due to ongoing shortages of diagnostics, medicines and infrastructure. Over the next 3 years, 18 countries are projected to implement >30 of the 45 interventions, four countries aim to implement 20–30 and four expect to implement fewer than 20. While primary health systems in most HEARTS-implementing countries do not yet appear ready to deliver integrated cardiovascular, kidney and metabolic care, the scale-up of HEARTS 2.0 presents a strong opportunity to advance this integration. As health systems worldwide face the challenge of increasing multimorbidity in their patients and fragmented care delivery systems, this assessment offers a practical tool for planning and action.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hypertension (MESH:D006973), cardiovascular, kidney and metabolic conditions (MESH:D007674)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12815231/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12815231