Herbst Austin Gregory, Olds Peter, Nuwagaba Gabriel, Okello Samson, Haberer Jessica
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Center for Global Health, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jan 6;11(1):e040650. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040650.
Novel care models are needed to address the large burden of hypertension globally. We aimed to explore how patients in rural Uganda experience and perceive hypertension in order to understand factors that may inform development of a patient-centred care model for hypertension management in this setting.
We conducted one-time, in-depth qualitative interviews focusing on participants' experiences and perceptions of the meaning and management of hypertension.
Outpatient clinic at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital in Uganda.
We enrolled patients who had hypertension and had used antihypertensive medication for at least 1 month. We used purposive sampling to recruit 30 participants with similar representation by gender and by absence or presence of comorbid conditions.
Participants had been diagnosed and initiated care at various clinical stages of hypertension, which impacted their understanding of hypertension. Several participants saw hypertension as a chronic disease that can lead to complications if not controlled, while others attributed symptoms typically associated with other diseases to hypertension. Participants described inconsistent access to antihypertensive medications and difficulty with transport to the clinic (time needed and expense) as the major barriers to access to care. Initiation and maintenance of care were facilitated by family support and ready access to health facilities. Many participants identified an understanding of the important lifestyle and dietary changes required to control hypertension.
Patients with hypertension in rural Uganda demonstrated a varied understanding and experience with hypertension. Interventions leveraging family support may help with patient education and clinical management. Integration of patient perspectives into the care model, patient-centred care, may serve as a successful model for hypertension and potentially delivery of care for other non-communicable diseases in Uganda and other similar resource-limited settings.
需要新的护理模式来应对全球高血压的巨大负担。我们旨在探讨乌干达农村地区的患者如何体验和认知高血压,以便了解可能为该环境下以患者为中心的高血压管理护理模式的发展提供信息的因素。
我们进行了一次性的深入定性访谈,重点关注参与者对高血压的意义和管理的体验和认知。
乌干达姆巴拉拉地区转诊医院的门诊诊所。
我们招募了患有高血压且已使用抗高血压药物至少1个月的患者。我们采用目的抽样法招募了30名参与者,在性别以及是否存在合并症方面具有相似的代表性。
参与者在高血压的不同临床阶段被诊断并开始接受治疗,这影响了他们对高血压的理解。一些参与者将高血压视为一种慢性病,如果不加以控制可能会导致并发症,而另一些参与者则将通常与其他疾病相关的症状归因于高血压。参与者将抗高血压药物获取的不一致以及前往诊所的交通困难(所需时间和费用)描述为获得护理的主要障碍。家庭支持和方便前往卫生设施促进了护理的启动和维持。许多参与者认识到了解控制高血压所需的重要生活方式和饮食变化。
乌干达农村地区的高血压患者对高血压表现出不同的理解和体验。利用家庭支持的干预措施可能有助于患者教育和临床管理。将患者观点纳入护理模式,即以患者为中心的护理,可能成为乌干达及其他类似资源有限环境中高血压护理以及可能的其他非传染性疾病护理的成功模式。