Hypertension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Patient-Physician Partnership to Improve High Blood Pressure Adherence
To test the efficacy of a patient-centered, culturally tailored education and activation intervention designed to improve adherence to medication and life style recommendations among adults with uncontrolled hypertension.
BACKGROUND:
Hypertension is a common, chronic condition that contributes substantially to cardiovascular
morbidity and mortality and resource use. Despite the proven efficacy of pharmacologic
therapy and lifestyle modification for treatment of hypertension and prevention of its
complications, most adults with established hypertension are uncontrolled. Limited access to
medical care and financial barriers to obtaining medications play an important role;
however, even among patients who receive regular care, blood pressure control remains
suboptimal. Patient non-adherence to recommended therapies and problems in physician
management of patients with hypertension are critical contributors to poor quality of care
and negative health outcomes of hypertension. Of particular concern is the
disproportionately high prevalence and incidence of hypertension and its complications among
African Americans and socioeconomically disadvantaged persons. Ethnic and social class
disparities in patient adherence are frequently based on financial, logistical,
environmental, and cultural barriers that, while not unique to ethnic minorities and the
poor, have a greater impact on these populations. Patient and physician interventions were
designed to address the specific needs of inner city ethnic minorities and persons living in
poverty. The study used a patient-centered, culturally tailored, education and activation
intervention with active follow-up delivered by a community health worker in the clinic. It
also included a computerized, self-study communication skills training program delivered via
an interactive CD-ROM, with tailored feedback to address physicians' individual
communication skills needs.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The study used a patient-centered, culturally tailored, education and activation
intervention with active follow-up delivered by a community health worker in the clinic. It
also included a computerized, self-study communication skills training program delivered via
an interactive CD-ROM, with tailored feedback to address physicians' individual
communication skills needs. Fifty physicians and 500 of their patients who had uncontrolled
hypertension were recruited into a randomized controlled trial with a 2X2 factorial design.
The 50 physicians were randomized to receive either a 2-hour CD-ROM based communication
skills training or no training. Within each randomized physician, 10 patient-subjects were
randomized to either minimal intervention or patient activation (community health worker
visit and follow-up calls, plus photo novels and other mailed educational literature).
Assessments of primary care appointment keeping, medication possession, medication taking,
health status, satisfaction, and numerous other variables were made at baseline, 3 months,
and 12 months.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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