Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care, Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, NC 27705, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2012 Dec;27(12):1682-9. doi: 10.1007/s11606-012-2138-x. Epub 2012 Aug 3.
African Americans are significantly more likely than whites to have uncontrolled hypertension, contributing to significant disparities in cardiovascular disease and events.
The goal of this study was to examine whether there were differences in change in blood pressure (BP) for African American and non-Hispanic white patients in response to a medication management and tailored nurse-delivered telephone behavioral program.
Five hundred and seventy-three patients (284 African American and 289 non-Hispanic white) primary care patients who participated in the Hypertension Intervention Nurse Telemedicine Study (HINTS) clinical trial.
Study arms included: 1) nurse-administered, physician-directed medication management intervention, utilizing a validated clinical decision support system; 2) nurse-administered, behavioral management intervention; 3) combined behavioral management and medication management intervention; and 4) usual care. All interventions were activated based on poorly controlled home BP values.
Post-hoc analysis of change in systolic and diastolic blood pressure. General linear models (PROC MIXED in SAS, version 9.2) were used to estimate predicted means at 6-month, 12-month, and 18-month time points, by intervention arm and race subgroups (separate models for systolic and diastolic blood pressure).
Improvement in mean systolic blood pressure post-baseline was greater for African American patients in the combined intervention, compared to African American patients in usual care, at 12 months (6.6 mmHg; 95 % CI: -12.5, -0.7; p=0.03) and at 18 months (9.7 mmHg; -16.0, -3.4; p=0.003). At 18 months, mean diastolic BP was 4.8 mmHg lower (95 % CI: -8.5, -1.0; p=0.01) among African American patients in the combined intervention arm, compared to African American patients in usual care. There were no analogous differences for non-Hispanic white patients.
The combination of home BP monitoring, remote medication management, and telephone tailored behavioral self-management appears to be particularly effective for improving BP among African Americans. The effect was not seen among non-Hispanic white patients.
非裔美国人患未得到控制的高血压的可能性明显高于白人,这导致了心血管疾病和事件方面的巨大差异。
本研究的目的是检查在药物管理和量身定制的护士电话行为计划的作用下,非裔美国人和非西班牙裔白种人患者的血压变化是否存在差异。
参加高血压干预护士远程医疗研究(HINTS)临床试验的 573 名患者(284 名非裔美国人和 289 名非西班牙裔白人)初级保健患者。
研究组包括:1)护士管理、医生指导的药物管理干预,利用验证的临床决策支持系统;2)护士管理、行为管理干预;3)结合行为管理和药物管理干预;4)常规护理。所有干预措施均根据家庭血压控制不佳的情况启动。
收缩压和舒张压变化的事后分析。使用广义线性模型(SAS 版本 9.2 中的 PROC MIXED),根据干预组和种族亚组(收缩压和舒张压的单独模型)估计 6 个月、12 个月和 18 个月时的预测平均值。
与常规护理相比,联合干预组的非裔美国患者的基线后平均收缩压在 12 个月(6.6mmHg;95%CI:-12.5,-0.7;p=0.03)和 18 个月(9.7mmHg;-16.0,-3.4;p=0.003)时改善更大。在 18 个月时,联合干预组的非裔美国患者的平均舒张压低 4.8mmHg(95%CI:-8.5,-1.0;p=0.01),而常规护理组的非裔美国患者则没有类似的差异。
家庭血压监测、远程药物管理和电话量身定制的行为自我管理相结合,似乎对改善非裔美国人的血压特别有效。在非西班牙裔白种人患者中没有观察到这种效果。