Cargando…

An Interactive Voice Response and Text Message Intervention to Improve Blood Pressure Control Among Individuals With Hypertension Receiving Care at an Urban Indian Health Organization: Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial

BACKGROUND: Efficient and effective strategies for treating chronic health conditions such as hypertension are particularly needed for under-resourced clinics such as Urban Indian Health Organizations (UIHOs). OBJECTIVE: The objective of the Controlling Blood Pressure Trial is to assess the impact o...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schroeder, Emily B, Moore, Kelly, Manson, Spero M, Baldwin, Megan A, Goodrich, Glenn K, Malone, Allen S, Pieper, Lisa E, Xu, Stanley, Fort, Meredith M, Johnson, David, Son-Stone, Linda, Steiner, John F
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6465973/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30938688
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/11794
_version_ 1783411003281637376
author Schroeder, Emily B
Moore, Kelly
Manson, Spero M
Baldwin, Megan A
Goodrich, Glenn K
Malone, Allen S
Pieper, Lisa E
Xu, Stanley
Fort, Meredith M
Johnson, David
Son-Stone, Linda
Steiner, John F
author_facet Schroeder, Emily B
Moore, Kelly
Manson, Spero M
Baldwin, Megan A
Goodrich, Glenn K
Malone, Allen S
Pieper, Lisa E
Xu, Stanley
Fort, Meredith M
Johnson, David
Son-Stone, Linda
Steiner, John F
author_sort Schroeder, Emily B
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Efficient and effective strategies for treating chronic health conditions such as hypertension are particularly needed for under-resourced clinics such as Urban Indian Health Organizations (UIHOs). OBJECTIVE: The objective of the Controlling Blood Pressure Trial is to assess the impact of an interactive voice response and text message (IVR-T) intervention compared with usual care among individuals with hypertension receiving care at a UIHO in Albuquerque, New Mexico. This manuscript presents the baseline characteristics of individuals enrolled in the trial and compares their characteristics with those in the hypertension registry who did not enroll in the trial. METHODS: A hypertension registry developed from the clinic’s electronic health record was used for recruitment. Potentially eligible participants were contacted by letter and then by phone. Those who expressed interest completed an in-person baseline visit that included a baseline survey and blood pressure measurement using standardized procedures. Individuals randomized to the intervention group could opt to receive either automated text messages or automated phone calls in either English or Spanish. The messages include reminders of upcoming appointments at First Nations Community HealthSource, requests to reschedule recently missed appointments, monthly reminders to refill medications, and weekly motivational messages to encourage self-care, appointment keeping, and medication taking for hypertension. Individuals in the IVR-T arm could opt to nominate a care partner to also receive notices of upcoming and missed appointments. Individuals in the IVR-T arm were also offered a home blood pressure monitor. Follow-up visits will be conducted at 6 months and 12 months. RESULTS: Over a 9.5-month period from April 2017 to January 2018, 295 participants were enrolled from a recruitment list of 1497 individuals. The enrolled cohort had a mean age of 53 years, was 25.1% (74/295) American Indian or Alaska Native and 51.9% (153/295) Hispanic, and 39.0% (115/295) had a baseline blood pressure greater than or equal to 140/90 mmHg. Overall, the differences between those enrolled in the trial and patients with hypertension who were ineligible, those who could not be reached, or those who chose not to enroll were minimal. Enrolled individuals had a slightly lower blood pressure (129/77 mmHg vs 132/79 mmHg; P=.04 for systolic blood pressure and P=.01 for diastolic blood pressure), were more likely to self-pay for their care (26% vs 10%; P<.001), and had a more recent primary care visit (164 days vs 231 days; P<.001). The enrolled cohort reported a high prevalence of poor health, low socioeconomic status, and high levels of basic material needs. CONCLUSIONS: The Controlling Blood Pressure Trial has successfully enrolled a representative sample of individuals receiving health care at a UIHO. Trial follow-up will conclude in February 2019. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03135405; http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03135405 (Archived by WebCite http://www.webcitation.org/76H2B4SO6) INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/11794
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6465973
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-64659732019-04-26 An Interactive Voice Response and Text Message Intervention to Improve Blood Pressure Control Among Individuals With Hypertension Receiving Care at an Urban Indian Health Organization: Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial Schroeder, Emily B Moore, Kelly Manson, Spero M Baldwin, Megan A Goodrich, Glenn K Malone, Allen S Pieper, Lisa E Xu, Stanley Fort, Meredith M Johnson, David Son-Stone, Linda Steiner, John F JMIR Res Protoc Protocol BACKGROUND: Efficient and effective strategies for treating chronic health conditions such as hypertension are particularly needed for under-resourced clinics such as Urban Indian Health Organizations (UIHOs). OBJECTIVE: The objective of the Controlling Blood Pressure Trial is to assess the impact of an interactive voice response and text message (IVR-T) intervention compared with usual care among individuals with hypertension receiving care at a UIHO in Albuquerque, New Mexico. This manuscript presents the baseline characteristics of individuals enrolled in the trial and compares their characteristics with those in the hypertension registry who did not enroll in the trial. METHODS: A hypertension registry developed from the clinic’s electronic health record was used for recruitment. Potentially eligible participants were contacted by letter and then by phone. Those who expressed interest completed an in-person baseline visit that included a baseline survey and blood pressure measurement using standardized procedures. Individuals randomized to the intervention group could opt to receive either automated text messages or automated phone calls in either English or Spanish. The messages include reminders of upcoming appointments at First Nations Community HealthSource, requests to reschedule recently missed appointments, monthly reminders to refill medications, and weekly motivational messages to encourage self-care, appointment keeping, and medication taking for hypertension. Individuals in the IVR-T arm could opt to nominate a care partner to also receive notices of upcoming and missed appointments. Individuals in the IVR-T arm were also offered a home blood pressure monitor. Follow-up visits will be conducted at 6 months and 12 months. RESULTS: Over a 9.5-month period from April 2017 to January 2018, 295 participants were enrolled from a recruitment list of 1497 individuals. The enrolled cohort had a mean age of 53 years, was 25.1% (74/295) American Indian or Alaska Native and 51.9% (153/295) Hispanic, and 39.0% (115/295) had a baseline blood pressure greater than or equal to 140/90 mmHg. Overall, the differences between those enrolled in the trial and patients with hypertension who were ineligible, those who could not be reached, or those who chose not to enroll were minimal. Enrolled individuals had a slightly lower blood pressure (129/77 mmHg vs 132/79 mmHg; P=.04 for systolic blood pressure and P=.01 for diastolic blood pressure), were more likely to self-pay for their care (26% vs 10%; P<.001), and had a more recent primary care visit (164 days vs 231 days; P<.001). The enrolled cohort reported a high prevalence of poor health, low socioeconomic status, and high levels of basic material needs. CONCLUSIONS: The Controlling Blood Pressure Trial has successfully enrolled a representative sample of individuals receiving health care at a UIHO. Trial follow-up will conclude in February 2019. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03135405; http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03135405 (Archived by WebCite http://www.webcitation.org/76H2B4SO6) INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/11794 JMIR Publications 2019-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6465973/ /pubmed/30938688 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/11794 Text en ©Emily B Schroeder, Kelly Moore, Spero M Manson, Megan A Baldwin, Glenn K Goodrich, Allen S Malone, Lisa E Pieper, Stanley Xu, Meredith M Fort, David Johnson, Linda Son-Stone, John F Steiner. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (http://www.researchprotocols.org), 02.04.2019. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Research Protocols, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.researchprotocols.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Protocol
Schroeder, Emily B
Moore, Kelly
Manson, Spero M
Baldwin, Megan A
Goodrich, Glenn K
Malone, Allen S
Pieper, Lisa E
Xu, Stanley
Fort, Meredith M
Johnson, David
Son-Stone, Linda
Steiner, John F
An Interactive Voice Response and Text Message Intervention to Improve Blood Pressure Control Among Individuals With Hypertension Receiving Care at an Urban Indian Health Organization: Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial
title An Interactive Voice Response and Text Message Intervention to Improve Blood Pressure Control Among Individuals With Hypertension Receiving Care at an Urban Indian Health Organization: Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial
title_full An Interactive Voice Response and Text Message Intervention to Improve Blood Pressure Control Among Individuals With Hypertension Receiving Care at an Urban Indian Health Organization: Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial
title_fullStr An Interactive Voice Response and Text Message Intervention to Improve Blood Pressure Control Among Individuals With Hypertension Receiving Care at an Urban Indian Health Organization: Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial
title_full_unstemmed An Interactive Voice Response and Text Message Intervention to Improve Blood Pressure Control Among Individuals With Hypertension Receiving Care at an Urban Indian Health Organization: Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial
title_short An Interactive Voice Response and Text Message Intervention to Improve Blood Pressure Control Among Individuals With Hypertension Receiving Care at an Urban Indian Health Organization: Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial
title_sort interactive voice response and text message intervention to improve blood pressure control among individuals with hypertension receiving care at an urban indian health organization: protocol and baseline characteristics of a pragmatic randomized controlled trial
topic Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6465973/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30938688
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/11794
work_keys_str_mv AT schroederemilyb aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT moorekelly aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT mansonsperom aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT baldwinmegana aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT goodrichglennk aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT maloneallens aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT pieperlisae aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT xustanley aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT fortmeredithm aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT johnsondavid aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT sonstonelinda aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT steinerjohnf aninteractivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT schroederemilyb interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT moorekelly interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT mansonsperom interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT baldwinmegana interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT goodrichglennk interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT maloneallens interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT pieperlisae interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT xustanley interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT fortmeredithm interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT johnsondavid interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT sonstonelinda interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial
AT steinerjohnf interactivevoiceresponseandtextmessageinterventiontoimprovebloodpressurecontrolamongindividualswithhypertensionreceivingcareatanurbanindianhealthorganizationprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofapragmaticrandomizedcontrolledtrial