| Literature DB >> 26691646 |
Julie Gleason-Comstock1,2,3, Alicia Streater4, Joel Ager5, Allen Goodman6, Aaron Brody7, Laura Kivell8, Aniruddha Paranjpe9, Jasmine Vickers10,11, LynnMarie Mango12, Rachelle Dawood13, Phillip Levy14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Persistently elevated blood pressure (BP) is a leading risk factor for cardiovascular disease development, making effective hypertension management an issue of considerable public health importance. Hypertension is particularly prominent among African Americans, who have higher disease prevalence and consistently lower BP control than Whites and Hispanics. Emergency departments (ED) have limited resources for chronic disease management, especially for under-served patients dependent upon the ED for primary care, and are not equipped to conduct follow-up. Kiosk-based patient education has been found to be effective in primary care settings, but little research has been done on the effectiveness of interactive patient education modules as ED enhanced discharge for an under-served urban minority population. METHODS/Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26691646 PMCID: PMC4687379 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-015-0052-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Population-based systems approach to hypertension control
| Patient (Host) | Emergency department (Agent) | Health service delivery (Environment) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Precedent | Health belief/behavior | Treatment protocols | Public transportation |
| Socioeconomic status | Physician knowledge | Economic climate | |
| Health Literacy | Case management | Educational opportunities | |
| Perceived disease severity | |||
| Intervention | Treatment preferences | Patient management | Proximity to primary care |
| Health status | Practice patterns | Quality of health services | |
| Healthcare coverage | Competing priorities | Contextual empathy | |
| Perceived level of risk | Patient discharge | Patient education | |
| Antecedent | Self-efficacy | Referral to chronic care | Health education |
| Clinical outcome | Provision of follow-up | Health information technology | |
| Access to medical care |
Adaptation of the Haddan Matrix from Levy and Cline, 2009 [11]
Fig. 1Kiosk-based patient education as enhanced discharge: IMB conceptual model
Fig. 2Study flow chart
Fig. 3Anti- hypertensive regimen. Note: Medications are prescribed in the absence of any contraindications
AchieveBP patient education kiosk modules
| Session | Module/Topic | Content example |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Baseline | Blood Pressure and Hypertension Definitions | "Hypertension" is the medical term for high blood pressure. A person with high blood pressure is sometimes described as "hypertensive." |
| Essential vs. Secondary Hypertension | Normal blood pressure is a systolic pressure of 120 or less. "Systolic" is the top number in a blood pressure reading. | |
| Systolic and Diastolic Normal Readings | ||
| 2. Seven Day | Hypertension Risk Factors | High blood pressure has many risk factors. Some you can't control. Family history - High blood pressure tends to run in families. |
| Other risk factors for high blood pressure are within your control: Too much sodium (salt) in your diet which can cause your body to retain fluid, which increases blood pressure. | ||
| 3. Thirty Day | Tobacco and Alcohol Use | If you drink more than moderate amounts of it, alcohol can actually raise blood pressure by several points. It can also reduce the effectiveness of high blood pressure medications. |
| Caffeine Use | ||
| Cut back on caffeine. The role caffeine plays in blood pressure is still debatable. Drinking caffeinated beverages can temporarily cause a spike in your blood pressure, but it's unclear whether the effect is temporary or long lasting. | ||
| 4. Ninety Day | BP Complications | Hypertension is frequently called the "silent killer" because it rarely causes symptoms. This is dangerous because untreated hypertension can lead to strokes, heart attacks, kidney disease, and vision loss. |
| Complications of Uncontrolled Blood Pressure | ||
| Very high blood pressure is dangerous. You should call your Healthcare Provider anytime day or night, if your resting systolic blood pressure is over 180 or your resting diastolic blood pressure is over 110. |