Authors’ Response to Peer Reviews of “The Psychological Impact of Hypertension During COVID-19 Restrictions: Retrospective Case-Control Study”

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Specific Comments: Major
Thank you for your review [2].We wrote this as a brief correspondence piece for rapid publication as a preprint because COVID-19 research and public health communications were rapidly evolving at this time.However, we have now rewritten the paper in standard paper format to address your concerns-this includes a much more detailed introduction and rationale, more explanations in the Methods section including assumptions, and an expanded discussion.Please see our detailed responses below.

Specific Comments: Minor
We have addressed the issues highlighted in the rewritten manuscript.Please see our detailed responses below.

Title/Abstract and References
1. We have changed the title to better reflect our methodology.
2. We have rewritten our work as a full paper rather than a short correspondence, including suggested references and other research that has emerged since the publication of our rapid preprint.The media references are important as they provide context for the study during a rapidly changing COVID-19 response.Introduction 1 and 2. We have included the references/points mentioned by the reviewer and a summary of other research that has emerged since the publication of our rapid preprint.Please note the New England Journal of Medicine paper has been retracted so we have not included this.

1.
We have included more details on methods to address the reviewer's points.This includes new sections on the setting, matching, and analysis.
2. We confirm that the original ethics approval covers all subsequent surveys and amendments.We have clarified this in the manuscript.
3. Another preprint from our study [4] that describes the sample at different time point shows it is comparable between April and June.We acknowledge that the respondents who remained in the study were likely more motivated and interested in COVID-19 prevention than those who dropped out.This is mentioned in the Discussion section.However, since the study design is not a randomized controlled trial, cases were matched to controls at the same time point, with demographic characteristics controlled for in the analyses, so our key comparison findings should not be affected by those differences.
We have also now performed exploratory analyses of the hypertension subsample by whether they were invited and returned for follow-up, compared to those who were not invited or did not return.We have included a text summary in the paper: "Those who were invited and returned for follow-up were similar for age and gender but had higher levels of education (P=.02) and were more likely to have adequate health literacy (P=.009)." 4. We have added more details about measures.This followed a US study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine [5], with whose authors we are collaborating on an international comparison.
"Participants were asked if they had any of the following conditions: asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, high blood pressure (hypertension), cancer, heart disease, stroke, diabetes, depression, anxiety." 5. We have added more details in the new Methods section.
6.We have added more details in the new Methods section.

(a)
The estimates referred to as "MMDs" from the linear models are marginal mean differences, not maximum mean discrepancy.This abbreviation is noted in the first row of Table 2.We have now added the abbreviations to the footnote of the table to avoid confusion and clarified the first use of MMD when reporting results in text.
(b) In regard to the use of a modified Poisson approach and reporting of relative risks: with increasing event rates, the difference between an odds ratio (as estimated by logistic regression) and the risk ratio (as estimated from a log-binomial or modified Poisson model) also increases, with odds ratios often incorrectly interpreted as if they are risks.As the reviewer points out, the study design is cross-sectional, so a risk/prevalence ratio is typically considered more appropriate and conceptually easier to interpret than an odds ratio.Although log-binomial regression can also be used to estimate the risk ratio, it is often criticized for producing confidence intervals that are narrower than they should be (ie, due to smaller than expected standard errors) and may also fail to converge.For this reason, we have employed a modified Poisson approach [6], which generates coefficients that, when exponentiated, represent the risk ratio, with corresponding confidence intervals of an appropriate width.As for reporting relative risk, numerically, the risk ratio/relative risk and prevalence ratio are identical, differing only in their interpretation based on the study design.In line with the reviewer's comment, we have changed the language used and describe the effect as an adjusted prevalence ratio rather than adjusted relative risk to better reflect the study design.
8. We have added a statement on this.

Results
1. We have added the footnote.Pairwise comparisons showed no statistically significant differences in age, gender, education, or health literacy between the hypertension and control groups (see the section on matching).We have explained social distancing and patient activation, and clarified the prescription question in the Methods section.
2. We have added this.
3. Please see our response above regarding MMD (marginal mean differences from linear regression models).As for the social distancing score, this is a typographical error and has been corrected.4. We have clarified that these are two separate questions.
5. We have moved this to the Discussion section with additional explanations.
6.We have clarified this.

Discussion and Conclusions
1-6.We have rewritten the article as a full paper rather than a short correspondence, including a more expansive discussion to address the points mentioned.We have highlighted key findings upfront, discussed different perspectives including access to care, clarified that we only measured vaccination intentions throughout, discussed the implications of the limitations, included points about misinformation on social media, and have more carefully explained our conclusions.

Round 1
Thank you for your review [3].We have addressed the comments as follows.

Title
We have revised the title to better reflect the study methods.

Abstract
We have revised this as suggested.

XSL • FO
RenderX provided the original work, first published in the JMIRx Med, is properly cited.The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://med.jmirx.org/,as well as this copyright and license information must be included.