| Literature DB >> 30913216 |
David Peiris1, Devarsetty Praveen1,2, Kishor Mogulluru2, Mohammed Abdul Ameer2, Arvind Raghu3, Qiang Li1, Stephane Heritier4, Stephen MacMahon1,5, Dorairaj Prabhakaran6,7,8, Gari D Clifford9,10, Rohina Joshi1,11, Pallab K Maulik1,5,11, Stephen Jan1, Lionel Tarassenko3, Anushka Patel1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are rising in India resulting in major health system challenges.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30913216 PMCID: PMC6435227 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0213708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Stepped wedge allocation sequence.
| Time | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steps | Months 0–6 | Months 7–12 | Months 13–18 | Months 19–24 |
| CONTROL | INTERVENTION | INTERVENTION | INTERVENTION | |
| CONTROL | CONTROL | INTERVENTION | INTERVENTION | |
| CONTROL | CONTROL | CONTROL | INTERVENTION | |
Fig 2Study flow.
PHC: Primary health centre.
Baseline characteristics for patients followed up in the control and intervention periods*.
| Control (n = 4294) | Intervention (n = 4348) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) mean (SD) | 61.0 (10.86) | 60.3 (10.71) |
| Male | 1892 (44.1%) | 1936 (44.5%) |
| Proportion never attended school | 2013 (46.9%) | 2034 (46.8%) |
| Occupation | ||
| • Agricultural labourer | 1007 (23.5%) | 1045 (24.0%) |
| • Housewife | 1371 (31.9%) | 1341 (30.8%) |
| • Retired | 990 (23.1%) | 997 (22.9%) |
| • Other | 251 (5.8%) | 244 (5.6%) |
| Past history | ||
| • Heart attack or angina | 507 (11.8%) | 515 (11.8%) |
| • Stroke | 349 (8.1%) | 399 (9.2%) |
| • Diabetes | 941 (21.9%) | 896 (20.6%) |
| • Hypertension | 1997 (46.5%) | 1986 (45.7%) |
| • Peripheral vascular disease | 46 (1.1%) | 23 (0.5%) |
| 10 year CVD risk | ||
| • 20—<30% | 691 (16.1%) | 696 (16.0%) |
| • 30—<40% | 276 (6.4%) | 262 (6.0%) |
| • > = 40% | 215 (5.0%) | 168 (3.9%) |
| • SBP > 160 mmHg or DBP > 100mmHg | 2251 (52.4%) | 2324 (53.4%) |
| • CVD | 710 (16.5%) | 755 (17.4%) |
| Current tobacco use | 1099 (25.6%) | 1155 (26.6%) |
| Physical inactivity | 1444 (33.6%) | 1404 (32.3%) |
| Self-reported current medication use | ||
| • BP lowering | 1805 (42.3%) | 1810 (41.8%) |
| • Lipid lowering | 159 (3.7%) | 183 (4.2%) |
| • Anti-platelet | 102 (2.4%) | 116 (2.7%) |
| SBP less than 140mmHg | 758 (17.7%) | 791 (18.2%) |
| BMI (kg/m2)Mean (SD) | 24.6 (5.05) | 24.33 (4.98) |
| SBP (mmHg) Mean (SD) | 157.3(23.23) | 156.55 (22.90) |
| DBP (mmHg)Mean (SD) | 88.8 (13.91) | 89.11 (13.80) |
| Glucose (mg/dL) Mean (SD) | 165.0 (81.14) | 162.01 (81.60) |
| EQ5D utility score mean (SD) | 0.800 (0.2166) | 0.805 (0.2107) |
*All proportions presented are prevalence rates
CVD: Cardiovascular diseases; SBP: Systolic Blood Pressure; DBP: Diastolic Blood Pressure; BMI: Body Mass Index; EQ5D: EuroQol 5-dimension questionnaire
Fig 3Primary and secondary outcomes by randomization period.
SBP: systolic blood pressure; CVD: cardiovascular disease; DBP: diastolic blood pressure; BMI: body mass index; EQ5D: EuroQol quality of life instrument; ICC: intraclass correlation coefficient.
Concordance of CVD risk assessment between baseline data collectors and ASHA assessment.
| Baseline household census | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Low/ mod CVD risk | High CVD risk | ||
| Low/ mod CVD risk | 39432 | 5371 | |
| High CVD risk | 4139 | 4280 | |
| Not screened | 7082 | 1833 | |