School of Population Health, The Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
Central Department of Public Health, Tribhuvan University Institute of Medicine, Maharajgunj, Kathmandu, Nepal.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Aug 9;21(1):1524. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-11548-4.
Nepal has a high prevalence of hypertension which is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases globally. It is inadequately controlled even after its diagnosis despite the availability of effective treatment of hypertension. There is a need for an in-depth understanding of the barriers and facilitators using theory to inform interventions to improve the control of hypertension. This formative study was conducted to address this gap by exploring the perceived facilitators and barriers to treatment and control of hypertension in Nepal.
We conducted in-depth interviews (IDIs) among hypertensive patients, their family members, healthcare providers and key informants at primary (health posts and primary health care center) and tertiary level (Kathmandu Medical College) facilities in Kathmandu, Nepal. Additionally, data were collected using focus group discussions (FGDs) with hypertensive patients. Recordings of IDIs and FGDs were transcribed, coded both inductively and deductively, and subthemes generated. The emerging subthemes were mapped to the Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation-Behaviour (COM-B) model using a deductive approach.
Major uncovered themes as capability barriers were misconceptions about hypertension, its treatment and difficulties in modifying behaviour. Faith in alternative medicine and fear of the consequences of established treatment were identified as motivation barriers. A lack of communication between patients and providers, stigma related to hypertension and fear of its disclosure, and socio-cultural factors shaping health behaviour were identified as opportunity barriers in the COM-B model. The perceived threat of the disease, a reflective motivator, was a facilitator in adhering to treatment.
This formative study, using the COM-B model of behaviour change identified several known and unknown barriers and facilitators that influence poor control of blood pressure among people diagnosed with hypertension in Kathmandu, Nepal. These findings need to be considered when developing targeted interventions to improve treatment adherence and blood pressure control of hypertensive patients.
尼泊尔的高血压患病率很高,而高血压是全球心血管疾病的主要危险因素。尽管有有效的高血压治疗方法,但即使在诊断出高血压后,其控制情况仍不理想。需要深入了解使用理论来告知干预措施以改善高血压控制的障碍和促进因素。本形成性研究旨在通过探索尼泊尔高血压患者的治疗和控制的感知障碍和促进因素来解决这一差距。
我们在尼泊尔加德满都的初级(卫生所和初级卫生保健中心)和三级(加德满都医学院)医疗机构中,对高血压患者、其家属、医疗保健提供者和关键信息提供者进行了深入访谈(IDIs)。此外,还通过高血压患者的焦点小组讨论(FGDs)收集数据。对 IDIs 和 FGDs 的录音进行了转录、进行了归纳和演绎编码,并生成了子主题。使用演绎方法将出现的子主题映射到能力、机会和动机-行为(COM-B)模型中。
能力障碍的主要未被发现的主题包括对高血压及其治疗的误解以及改变行为的困难。对替代医学的信任和对既定治疗后果的恐惧被确定为动机障碍。患者与提供者之间缺乏沟通、与高血压相关的耻辱感以及塑造健康行为的社会文化因素被确定为 COM-B 模型中的机会障碍。对疾病的感知威胁,作为一个反思性的促进因素,是坚持治疗的促进因素。
本形成性研究使用行为改变的 COM-B 模型,确定了一些已知和未知的障碍和促进因素,这些因素会影响尼泊尔加德满都被诊断出患有高血压的患者的血压控制情况不佳。在制定针对改善高血压患者的治疗依从性和血压控制的靶向干预措施时,需要考虑这些发现。