| Literature DB >> 34855617 |
Kathryn L DeLaughter1, Gemmae M Fix1,2, Sarah E McDannold1, Charlene Pope3,4, Barbara G Bokhour1,5, Stephanie L Shimada1,5,6, Rodney Calloway1, Howard S Gordon7,8,9, Judith A Long10,11, Danielle A Miano1, Sarah L Cutrona1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Peer narratives engage listeners through personally relevant content and have been shown to promote lifestyle change and effective self-management among patients with hypertension. Incorporating key quotations from these stories into follow-up text messages is a novel way to continue the conversation, providing reinforcement of health behaviors in the patients' daily lives.Entities:
Keywords: African American; hypertension; mobile phone; self-management; texting
Year: 2021 PMID: 34855617 PMCID: PMC8686408 DOI: 10.2196/29423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Key content areas and description.
| Key area | Description |
| Salt intake | Veterans describe strategies and contextually situated stories of how they managed salt intake |
| Talking with your physician | Veterans describe reasons why honest communication with providers is important |
| Take your medicine | Veterans describe strategies and motivation tools in taking their prescribed medicine |
| Exercise | Veterans talk about specific strategies to increase exercise |
| Stress management | Veterans describe tools and tactics to manage stress |
| Monitor your blood pressure | Veterans tell stories of ways they monitored their blood pressure |
| Diet or nutrition | Veteran storytellers describe how they improved their diet or learned more about the importance of nutrition |
| Faith or church or community | Veterans share how their faith, church or community is a source of support or motivation for them and their health |
| Alcohol or smoking or challenges | Veterans share their experiences with alcohol, smoking, etc and how they addressed these challenges |
Examples of narrative text messages (adapted from quotations from African American Veterans sharing stories about how they manage their hypertension).
| Hypertension self-management key content area | Direct quotation from unedited video transcripta | Draft text message | Examples of ways that narrative content and Veteran input were used to modify texts | Final |
| Low sodium diet | “ | “ |
Informed by narrative content, we incorporated the concept of craving The Veteran used this concept several times in the narrative to emphasize the role played by salt substitute | “ |
| Faith or church or community | “ | “ |
Informed by Veteran consultant feedback, we deleted: I can relate because I’ve been through it too. Our consultant felt this would be understood by another Veteran without needing to be stated. | “ |
| Exercise | “I began to see that it was affectin’ a lotta things in my life so I decided to do somethin’ about it, and that’s why I call it a journey...That’s what I do. | “ |
Informed by Veteran consultant feedback, we adopted standard spelling, while trying to keep the cadence of the Veteran voice. Our consultant observed that professionally typed transcriptions can reflect the bias of the transcriber. Including nonstandard spelling may offend those who personally experienced stigmatization related to their speech patterns. | “ |
aItalicized text corresponds to sections either paraphrased or directly quoted in text message.
Examples of interactive text messages.
| Interactive text sent and patient response | Condition | Automated texts acknowledging response | |
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| |||
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| EX 1, EX 2 | When reply received | “ |
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| EX 3 | When reply received | “ |
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| No reply or reminder | N/Aa | “ |
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| |||
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| ACT 0, ACT 1, ACT 2 | When reply received | “ |
|
| ACT 3, ACT 4, ACT 5, ACT 6, ACT 7 | When reply received | “ |
|
| No reply or reminder | N/A | “ |
aN/A: not applicable.