| Literature DB >> 33483867 |
Shahmir H Ali1, Nadia S Islam2, Yvonne Commodore-Mensah3,4, Stella S Yi5.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To outline intervention efforts focused on reducing hypertension disparities in immigrant communities in the U.S. and to identify areas in the design, implementation, and evaluation of these interventions that warrant further exploration guided by an implementation science framework. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Community-based participatory research; Hypertension; Immigrants; Implementation science; Intervention
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33483867 PMCID: PMC7821846 DOI: 10.1007/s11906-020-01121-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Hypertens Rep ISSN: 1522-6417 Impact factor: 5.369
Characteristics of recent hypertension interventional efforts examined through the CFIR framework
| Study | Characteristics of individuals | Intervention characteristics | Inner setting | Outer setting | Process |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oshunluyi et al. (2020) | African immigrants diagnosed with self-reported hypertension. | Setting: Church in southern California. Intervention: Group-based culturally adapted hypertension educational sessions, including storytelling. | Program staff: Volunteers, registered nurse, student investigator. | Collaborations: Meeting with church members and leadership to discuss project, answer questions. | Evaluation/Adaptions: Phone-based follow-up survey, create forum to share stories about their experience. |
| Ersike et al. (2020) | African immigrants (from sub-Saharan Africa). 64% female, 37.2 mean age, 52% full-time employed, 41% not health insured. | Setting: Church in Dallas, Texas. Intervention: Group-based culturally adapted hypertension educational sessions. | Program staff: Student investigator, project assistants, faculty advisor, data scientist. | Collaboration: Project was discussed with various church, organization, and business leaders in local area. Community leaders also acted as project facilitators. | Evaluation/Adaptions: Participants provided opportunity to give general feedback about experiences with project after its completion. |
| Ma et al. (2020) | Filipino Americans at risk of hypertension. 66–75% female, 55.3–43.5% employed, 100% lived in the U.S. for more than 10 years. | Setting: CBOs, local libraries, churches, homes in greater Philadelphia area. Intervention: Group-based culturally adapted hypertension educational sessions. Mobile app based physical activity, salt intake monitoring. Physical activity sessions. | Program staff: CHEs, CBO leaders. | Collaborations: Meetings with community leaders to develop intervention, assist in recruitment, coordinate workshops. | Evaluation/Adaptions: Feedback regarding educational materials was sought from CBO leaders throughout intervention. |
| Chandlet et al. (2019) | Hispanic adults with hypertension. 62–71% female, 44.4–46.8% mean age, 62–71% annual income less than $25,000. | Setting: Remote. Intervention: GSM electronic medication tray, and Bluetooth-enable BP measuring device with smart-phone app to assist. Text message reminders to measure BP were sent to participants. | Program staff: Clinical research staff, healthcare providers. | Collaboration: Iterative design process involved input from Hispanic adults to develop pool of text messages. | Evaluation/Adaptions: Healthcare providers made titration changes for participants throughout intervention. |
| Li et al. (2019) | Chinese immigrants with hypertension. 67% women, 70.9 mean age, 29.8 average years in the U.S. | Setting: Participants’ homes, senior home community center. Intervention: Video-based culturally adapted hypertension educational session focused on storytelling. | Program staff: Nurse, research assistant, principal research investigator. | Collaborations: Community leaders in local area were involved in participant recruitment. | Evaluation/Adaptions: Semi-structured post-intervention interviews to receive participant feedback on usefulness of videos and suggestions for further refinement. |
| Yi et al. (2019) | Asian American adults. 64% female, predominantly aged 55+ years, 48.3% Korean. | Setting: 12 FBOs in NYC/NJ. Intervention: Culturally tailored lifestyle counseling and hypertension care confidence building, BP “passports” for participants to document information to share with providers. | Program staff: Trained bilingual consultants, FBO volunteers. | Collaborations: Pre-existing coalition partners assisted in study site selection. Community partners met with FBO leadership and members to develop implementation plan aligning with organizational structure. | Evaluation/Adaptions: Weekly meetings with community partners to troubleshoot and adapt protocols if necessary. |
| Lopez et al. (2019) and Lopez et al. (2017) | South Asian adults with hypertension. (EHR intervention) 46.6% female, 49.8% aged 40–59 years. | Setting: PCP clinics, community spaces in NYC. Intervention: (1) Group-based culturally adapted hypertension educational sessions, including one-on-one follow-ups, (2) EHR intervention to enhance physician hypertension care. | Program staff: PCPs, clinic staff, CHWs, research staff, and assistants | Collaborations: Coalition of South Asian CBOs provided regular feedback in development and implementation of intervention. Independent EHR consultant higher for technical assistance. | Evaluation/Adaptions: Mixed method surveying and interviewing of participating PCPs and research staff on experience with intervention. |
| Ursua et al. (2018) | Filipino Americans with hypertension. 64.9% women, 53.9 mean age, 10.3 average years in the USA. | Setting: Churches, social service agencies, workplaces, homes in NYC. Intervention: Group-based culturally adapted hypertension educational sessions, including one-on-one follow-ups. | Program staff: CHWs employed by community partners | Collaborations: Community coalition provided feedback to identify study sites and discuss project development. | Evaluation/Adaptions: Monthly meetings to assess and enhance intervention efforts and identification of new study sites or partners. |
| Langabeer et al. (2018) | Hispanic adults with elevated, stage 1, or stage 2 hypertension. 58.7% female, 58.5 mean age, 61.9% had diabetes. | Setting: PCP clinics, homes in San Antonio, Texas. Intervention: Personalized lifestyle counseling with routine follow-up, including use of BP cuffs and regular BP monitoring, nutrition, and fitness education. | Program staff: patient navigators, nurses | Collaborations: Intervention was organized by the AHA Southwest Affiliate. | Evaluation/Adaptions: (not reported). |
| Kling et al. (2018) | Majority (53.8%) Hispanic adults aged 55 or older. (Full population) 89.6% women, 50.9% aged 70 or older. | Setting: Open, multipurpose rooms inside park recreation centers in Miami-Dade County, Florida. Intervention: Group-based multilingual fitness classes. | Program staff: Certified fitness instructors, health and wellness specialists | Collaborations: Miami-Date County Department of Parks, Recreation and Open Spaces trained or employed intervention agents. | Evaluation/Adaptions: (not reported). |
CBO, community-based organization; CHW, community health workers; CHE, community health educator; GSM, global systems for mobile; BP, blood pressure; FBO, faith-based organization; NYC, New York City; NJ, New Jersey; EHR, electronic health record; PCP, primary care provider; AHA, American Heart Association
Using the CFIR framework to summarize key findings and future considerations in designing, implementing, and evaluating hypertension interventions for immigrant communities in the U.S.
| CFIF construct | Future considerations (general) | Future considerations (COVID-19 related) |
|---|---|---|
| Characteristics of individuals | - Targeted recruitment of men - Needs of second-generation immigrants or by acculturation level - Considering migration status in intervention design (e.g., undocumented vs. citizens) | - Community and personal trauma related to COVID-19 - Income, employment changes related to COVID-19 |
| Intervention characteristics | - Exploring both shorter and longer formats of hypertension interventions - Expanding beyond group-based educational sessions by incorporating culturally sensitive activities | - Designing and testing virtual or tele-based interventions - Incorporating principles on the link between hypertension and infectious diseases such as COVID-19 |
| Inner setting | - Diversifying intervention agents, including community-sourced agents | - Virtual forms of network and communication, training. - Considering changed ability to meet goals among program staff |
| Outer setting | - Engaging with community and other stakeholders in the direct implementation and evaluation of interventions - Building and sustaining long-term community coalitions | - Considering new community priorities and adapting to changing needs and policies - Using virtual platforms to sustain and enhance diverse community networks |
| Process | - Ensuring consistent reflective adaptation of intervention through mixed-method evaluation of implementation both during and post-intervention - Examining fidelity/consistency of intervention during different stages (e.g., recruitment, implementation, evaluation) | - Planning for rapidly changing needs and circumstances as a result of COVID-19 - Adapting fidelity assessments to consider virtual or semi-virtual interventions, and evaluating unique role of COVID-19 as a barrier in meeting intervention goals |