Two self-management interventions to improve hypertension control: a randomized trial.
Journal Article (Journal Article;Multicenter Study)
BACKGROUND: Fewer than 40% of persons with hypertension in the United States have adequate blood pressure (BP) control. OBJECTIVE: To compare 2 self-management interventions for improving BP control among hypertensive patients. DESIGN: A 2 x 2 randomized trial, stratified by enrollment site and patient health literacy status, with 2-year follow-up. (ClinicalTrials.gov registration number: NCT00123058). SETTING: 2 university-affiliated primary care clinics. PATIENTS: 636 hypertensive patients. INTERVENTION: A centralized, blinded, and stratified randomization algorithm was used to randomly assign eligible patients to receive usual care, a behavioral intervention (bimonthly tailored, nurse-administered telephone intervention targeting hypertension-related behaviors), home BP monitoring 3 times weekly, or the behavioral intervention plus home BP monitoring. MEASUREMENTS: The primary outcome was BP control at 6-month intervals over 24 months. RESULTS: 475 patients (75%) completed the 24-month BP follow-up. At 24 months, improvements in the proportion of patients with BP control relative to the usual care group were 4.3% (95% CI, -4.5% to 12.9%) in the behavioral intervention group, 7.6% (CI, -1.9% to 17.0%) in the home BP monitoring group, and 11.0% (CI, 1.9%, 19.8%) in the combined intervention group. Relative to usual care, the 24-month difference in systolic BP was 0.6 mm Hg (CI, -2.2 to 3.4 mm Hg) for the behavioral intervention group, -0.6 mm Hg (CI, -3.6 to 2.3 mm Hg) for the BP monitoring group, and -3.9 mm Hg (CI, -6.9 to -0.9 mm Hg) for the combined intervention group; patterns were similar for diastolic BP. LIMITATION: Changes in medication use and diet were monitored only in intervention participants; 24-month outcome data were missing for 25% of participants, BP control was adequate at baseline in 73% of participants, and the study setting was an academic health center. CONCLUSION: Combined home BP monitoring and tailored behavioral telephone intervention improved BP control, systolic BP, and diastolic BP at 24 months relative to usual care. .
Full Text
Duke Authors
- Adams, Martha Bennett
- Bosworth, Hayden Barry
- Dolor, Rowena Joy
- Oddone, Eugene Zaverio
- Olsen, Maren Karine
- Reed, Shelby Derene
- Svetkey, Laura Pat
Cited Authors
- Bosworth, HB; Olsen, MK; Grubber, JM; Neary, AM; Orr, MM; Powers, BJ; Adams, MB; Svetkey, LP; Reed, SD; Li, Y; Dolor, RJ; Oddone, EZ
Published Date
- November 17, 2009
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 151 / 10
Start / End Page
- 687 - 695
PubMed ID
- 19920269
Pubmed Central ID
- PMC2892337
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1539-3704
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.7326/0003-4819-151-10-200911170-00148
Language
- eng
Conference Location
- United States