Ovbiagele Bruce
Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina.
J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2015 Jan;24(1):1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2014.08.011. Epub 2014 Oct 24.
Over the last 4 decades, rates of stroke occurrence in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) have roughly doubled, whereas they have substantively decreased in high-income countries. Most of these LMIC are in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) where the burden of stroke will probably continue to rise over the next few decades because of an ongoing epidemiologic transition. Moreover, SSA is circumstantially distinct: socioeconomic obstacles, cultural barriers, underdiagnosis, uncoordinated care, and shortage of physicians impede the ability of SSA countries to implement cardiovascular disease prevention among people with diabetes mellitus in a timely and sustainable manner. Reducing the burden of stroke in SSA may necessitate an initial emphasis on high-risk individuals motivated to improve their health, multidisciplinary care coordination initiatives with clinical decision support, evidence-based interventions tailored for cultural relevance, task shifting from physicians to nurses and other health providers, use of novel patient-accessible tools, and a multilevel approach that incorporates individual- and system-level components. This article proposes a theory-based integrated blood pressure (BP) self-management intervention called Phone-based Intervention under Nurse Guidance after Stroke (PINGS) that could be tested among hospitalized stroke patients with poorly controlled hypertension encountered in SSA. PINGS would comprise the implementation of nurse-run BP control clinics and administration of health technology (personalized phone text messaging and home telemonitoring), aimed at boosting patient self-efficacy and intrinsic motivation for sustained adherence to antihypertensive medications.
在过去40年里,低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC)的中风发病率大致翻了一番,而在高收入国家却大幅下降。这些低收入和中等收入国家大多位于撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA),由于正在进行的流行病学转变,中风负担在未来几十年可能会继续上升。此外,撒哈拉以南非洲情况特殊:社会经济障碍、文化壁垒、诊断不足、护理不协调以及医生短缺,阻碍了该地区国家及时、可持续地对糖尿病患者实施心血管疾病预防措施。要减轻撒哈拉以南非洲的中风负担,可能需要首先关注有改善健康意愿的高危个体,开展有临床决策支持的多学科护理协调举措,实施符合文化相关性的循证干预措施,将任务从医生转移到护士和其他医疗服务提供者,使用新型患者可及工具,以及采用包含个体和系统层面要素的多层次方法。本文提出一种基于理论且整合了血压(BP)自我管理的干预措施,称为中风后护士指导下的电话干预(PINGS),可在撒哈拉以南非洲遇到的高血压控制不佳的住院中风患者中进行测试。PINGS将包括设立由护士管理的血压控制诊所并应用健康技术(个性化手机短信和家庭远程监测),旨在提高患者自我效能以及持续坚持服用抗高血压药物的内在动力。