| Literature DB >> 28033090 |
Caitlin G Allen1, J Nell Brownstein2, Anamika Satsangi2, Cam Escoffery2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Rates of hypertension control remain low among underserved populations in the United States; moreover, disparities in hypertension-related cardiovascular disease death are increasing. Community health workers (CHWs) can address barriers to hypertension control among underrepresented and diverse populations. We identify unique roles CHWs play in hypertension self-management and medication adherence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28033090 PMCID: PMC5201147 DOI: 10.5888/pcd13.160236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Community Health Worker Roles in Hypertension Self-Management, United States, 2014 (n = 141)a
| Role | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Educate on healthy diet (rich in fruits and vegetables) | 118 (83.7) |
| Educate on low-sodium diet | 112 (79.4) |
| Help patients or clients understand that they should not stop taking their blood pressure medicine without talking to their doctors | 104 (73.8) |
| Help patients or clients with keeping doctor’s appointments | 103 (73.1) |
| Provide referrals to other social services | 94 (66.7) |
| Educate about shopping for and preparing healthy foods | 93 (66.0) |
| Help patients or clients understand they should talk to their doctors about any side effects they think their blood pressure medicines may have | 93 (66.0) |
| Assist with goal setting | 88 (62.4) |
| Offer or refer patients or clients to quit-smoking programs (smoking cessation) | 80 (56.7) |
| Help patients or clients with insurance issues (eg, getting insurance, keeping insurance) | 79 (56.0) |
| Help patients or clients with remembering to take medication by using pill boxes or other reminders | 79 (56.0) |
| Help with transportation | 76 (53.9) |
| Provide social support to patients or clients and family members | 75 (53.2) |
| Provide blood pressure measurements | 74 (52.5) |
| Counsel on filling and taking prescribed medicines as advised by doctors | 73 (51.8) |
| Help people get free or low-cost blood pressure medicines | 68 (48.2) |
| Provide in-home visits | 66 (46.8) |
| Provide telephone or text appointment reminders | 64 (45.4) |
| Assist with accessing exercise facilities | 59 (41.8) |
| Offer translation services | 54 (38.3) |
| Help people get free or low-cost home blood pressure monitors | 52 (36.9) |
| Help with access to child care | 29 (20.6) |
| Other | 6 (4.3) |
Respondents (who were aged ≥18 y, considered themselves to be community health workers, and spoke English) could check multiple items. Total does not equal 100%.
Responses included give out cards with blood pressure readings to bring in to their next doctor appointment; check to see if they know how to use blood pressure monitors correctly; check if they have the right size cuff; advise how to manage daily stress situations; educate on how to track each measurement on an electronic device; teach how to use a medical tracking device; tell them to stop by for a blood pressure check if in the area; facilitate access to affordable primary care; and offer self-management programs.
Hypertension Service Delivery Methods Used by Community Health Workers (n = 138a), United States, 2014
| Method | No (%) |
|---|---|
| Individual in-person sessions in your organization’s setting (clinic, office) | 85 (61.6) |
| Home visits | 75 (54.3) |
| Outreach in community setting | 66 (47.8) |
| Individual in-person sessions in community setting | 62 (44.9) |
| Outreach in your organization’s setting (clinic, office) | 58 (42.0) |
| Individual telephone and/or email sessions | 56 (40.6) |
| Group classes or sessions in community setting | 47 (34.1) |
| Group classes or sessions in your organization’s setting (clinic, office) | 39 (28.3) |
| Other | 1 (0.7) |
Number of participants who reported working with patients with high blood pressure.
Community Health Worker Responses Regarding Barriers to Medication Adherence and Roles of Community Health Workers in Medication Adherence for Hypertension, United States, 2014
| Dimension and Description | Barrier (% Reporting) | Role (% Reporting) |
|---|---|---|
|
| N = 82 | N = 84 |
|
Forgetfulness of taking medicine (76%) Perceived consequences of not taking medicines (71%) Perceived need for treatment (65%) Forgetfulness of getting medicine refilled (61%) Perceived effectiveness of treatment (55%) Other (5%) |
Counseling about changing health behaviors (eg, diet, physical activity, smoking) (92%) Counseling about the consequences of not taking medicine (88%) Counseling about necessity of treatment (81%) Counseling about the effectiveness of treatment (68%) Memory aids and reminders for taking medicines (63%) Memory aids and reminders for getting medicines refilled (52%) Other (2%) | |
|
| N = 92 | N = 84 |
|
Multiple health issues (85%) Confusion if they are taking several medication for different medical conditions (83%) Understanding they need to stay on their blood pressure medicines (79%) Understanding of high risk of high blood pressure (76%) Keeping medicine refilled (65%) Taking correct dose of medicine at the right time (53%) Smoking (53%) Trouble reading medicine bottles (48%) Using or opening medicine bottles or containers (19%) Other (1%) |
Encouraging healthy lifestyle (95%) Increasing knowledge about seriousness of high blood pressure (90%) Supporting patients with co-morbidities (86%) Encouraging smoking reduction or cessation (83%) Assisting with mental health and well-being issues (66%) Helping with medicine bottles (opening, closing, reading) (47%) Other (1%) | |
|
| N = 81 | Qualitative responses only |
|
Complex treatments (eg, patient takes more than 1 kind of medicine) (83%) Patients failure with taking medicines in the past (68%) Side effects (63%) — nausea, dizziness, fatigue Medicines change frequently (43%) Other (3%) |
Education (following physician advice, medication education) Follow-up and monitoring Home visits Communicating with health care providers Communicating with pharmacist Reviewing changes in medicines Suggesting reminders, alerts, alarms, pill boxes, and labels | |
|
| N = 92 | N = 92 |
|
Lack of knowledge by patient about high blood pressure medicine (82%) Inability to get medicine refilled (74%) Poor relationship between patient and doctor or provider (50%) Lack of communication among provider (49%) Access to health care provider (47%) Doctor or provider doesn’t know about patient needs (40%) Poor relationship between patient and pharmacist (37%) Other (7%) |
Helping patients schedule appointments (85%) Helping patients access a health care provider (84%) Spending time with patients discussing health systems barriers (78%) Assistance with communication among providers (77%) Helping patients get their medicine refills (75%) Assistance with relationship between patient and provider (70%) Educating provider about patient needs (59%) Working with pharmacist (40%) Other (8%) | |
|
| N = 80 | N = 80 |
|
Cost of medicines (80%) Transportation (78%) Cost of care and/or insurance (75%) Literacy issues (69%) Social support (58%) Belief that medicines are a financial burden (56%) Other (6%) |
Helping patients get low-cost medicine (81%) Helping patient’s family understand patient’s disease (77%) Helping patient get health insurance (75%) Helping with transportation needs (71%) Helping to read medicine label (69%) Other (7%) |
According to the World Health Organization’s 5 dimensions of adherence (23).