| Literature DB >> 36110577 |
Andi Masyitha Irwan1,2, Kathleen Potempa2, Nugroho Abikusno3, Syahrul Syahrul1.
Abstract
Background: Self-care practices such as lifestyle modifications in diet, exercise, and stress management are effective in reducing the incidence of and enhancing better management of hypertension. However, little is known about the self-care management practices of people with hypertension in Southeast Asia (SEA) countries where the prevalence of hypertension is sharply increasing.Entities:
Keywords: Southeast Asia countries; facilitating and inhibiting factors; self-care hypertension
Year: 2022 PMID: 36110577 PMCID: PMC9470121 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S367638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
Keywords for Databases
| No | Database | Keywords | Articles | Access Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Medline | ((((“Hypertension”[Mesh]) OR ((((hypertensive) OR (high blood pressure)) OR (blood pressure)) OR (hypertens))) AND ((“Self Care”[Mesh]) OR ((self-care practice) OR (self-management)))) OR ((“Life Style”[Mesh]) OR (lifestyle management))) AND ((“Asia, Southeastern”[Mesh]) OR ((southeast asia) OR (indonesia))) | 712 | August 10, 2021 |
| 2 | CINAHL | (MH “Hypertension”) OR “high blood pressure” OR “hypertensive” AND self-care practice OR lifestyle management AND southeast asia OR Indonesia | 243 | August 10, 2021 |
| 3 | Embase | “hypertension”/exp OR hypertensive OR “high blood pressure” AND “self care”/exp OR “self-care practice” OR “self-management” OR “lifestyle”/exp OR “healthy lifestyle”/exp AND “southeast asia”/exp OR “indonesia”/exp | 45 | August 10, 2021 |
| 4 | Scopus | (TITLE-ABS-KEY (hypertension) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (“high blood pressure”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (hypertensive) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (“self-care”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (“self-management”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (“lifestyle management”) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (“southeast asia”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (indonesia)) AND PUBYEAR > 2005 | 17 | August 10, 2021 |
| 5 | Web of Science Core Collection | (((((((TS=(hypertension)) OR TS=(“high blood pressure”)) OR TS=(hypertensive)) AND TS=(“self-care practice”)) OR TS=(“self-management”)) OR TS=(“lifestyle management”)) AND TS=(“southeast asia”)) OR TS=(indonesia) | 118 | August 10, 2021 |
| 6 | PsycINFO | DE “Hypertension” OR “high blood pressure” OR “hypertensive” AND DE “self-care” OR “self-management” OR “lifestyle management” | 182 | August 10, 2021 |
| 7 | Global Health | (hypertension) OR (high blood pressure) OR (hypertensive) AND (self-care practice) OR (self-management) OR (lifestyle management) AND yr:[2006 TO 2021]Refinements:Document type = Journal articleAND Geographic Location = Vietnam OR Malaysia OR Singapore OR Thailand OR Indonesia | 138 | August 10, 2021 |
| 8 | Global Index Medicus | (tw:(hypertension)) OR (tw:(high blood pressure)) OR (tw:(hypertensive)) AND (tw:(self-care practice)) OR (tw:(self-management)) OR (tw:(lifestyle management)) AND (tw:(southeast asia)) OR (tw:(indonesia)) | 31 | August 10, 2021 |
| 9 | Cochrane Library | 133 | August 10, 2021 | |
| 10 | Garuda | Search hipertensi OR tekanan darah tinggi OR tekanan darah AND self-care AND self-management AND gaya hidup, by abstract | 48 | August 10, 2021 |
| 11 | Google Scholar | “Hypertension” OR “high blood pressure” OR “hypertensive” AND “self-care practice” OR “self-management” OR “lifestyle management” AND “southeast asia” OR “Indonesia” | 41 | August 1, 2021 |
Eligibility Criteria for Articles
| Criterion | Inclusion |
|---|---|
| Population | Studies focused on adult (18 years and over) hypertensive patients |
| Concept | Self-care management methods |
| Context | Conducted in SEA, a subregion of Asia and consists of eleven countries: Brunei, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Singapore, the Philippines, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar, and East Timor |
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart.
Articles Exploring Self-Care Management for Hypertension (Quantitative and Mixed Method Studies)
| Author, Year | Aim | Sample (n, M Age, Range) and Setting | Findings | Self-Care Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sulastri et al | To investigate the relationship of obesity with the incidence of hypertension among Minangkabau ethnic | n=204 (range=35–65) | Obese (56.6%) and central obesity (54.9%) | Traditional: Bodyweight management with a cultural approach |
| Herwati & Sartika | To determine the relationship between diet and exercise habits with controlled blood pressure among hypertensive patients | n=78 | Poor diet pattern (59.5%) and poor exercise habit (85.1%) | Traditional: Dietary intake and physical exercise |
| Santoso et al | To determine predictors of physical activity among older people with hypertension | n= 174, M age= 66 years (range=60–85) | Inadequate physical activity (44.2%) | Traditional: physical exercise |
| Adriaansz et al | To identify the correlation between food intake and hypertension incidence among older people | n=47 | High salt intake (88.2%) and high fat intake 70.5% | Traditional: Dietary sodium and fat intake |
| Nurdiantami et al | To investigate the association of general and central obesity with hypertension in women | n=313,714, ≥18 years old | Less active (52.9%), never smoke (95.6%), overweight (31.1%), obese (13.9%) | Traditional: Physical exercise, tobacco cessation Body weight management |
| Diana et al | To explore the risk factors of hypertension among married couples | n=112 couples, (range=40–59) | Overweight and obese (35.8%), high body fat (38.4%), and high visceral fat (33.8%) | Traditional: Bodyweight management |
| Rahmawati & Bajorek | To explore how and where people obtain their anti-hypertensive medications | n=384, M age = 65.7 years (range= 45–90) | Traditional medicines only (68.5%), both traditional and antihypertensive medication (33.6%) | Traditional: Medication adherence |
| Rahmawati & Bajorek | To identify medication adherence and hypertension knowledge and their predictive factors | n=384, M age = 65.7 years (range= 45–90) | Medication adherence (11%) | Traditional: Medication adherence |
| Rahmawati & Bajorek | To describe the use of traditional medicines and to identify factors associated with hypertension | n=384, M age = 65.7 years (range= 45–90) | Anti-hypertensive medications from public or private healthcare services (52.9%) | Traditional: Medication adherence |
| Pertiwi et al | To determine the factors associated with the visit-to-visit variability of blood pressure among hypertensive patients | n=74, M age= 62.70 years (range= 45–81) | Sodium intake (mg/day) was 1387.14 ±451.98 and BMI was 25.49 ± 4.07 | Traditional: Dietary sodium intake and bodyweight management |
| Noventi & Kartini | To examine the relationship between the Healthy Lifestyle Index score to the occurrence of hypertension in | n= 90 | Smoking from mountainous (53%), coastal (6.7%) and urban (53%) communities Unhealthy dietary habit from mountainous (20%), coastal (70%) and urban (60%) communities Active physical activity from mountainous (20%), coastal (63%), and urban (73%) communities Obese from mountainous (53%), coastal (13%), and urban (70%) communities | Traditional: Physical exercise, Dietary intake, tobacco cessation, bodyweight management |
| Sutini et al | To determine the association of hypertension self-management with the incidence of stroke in patients with hypertension | n= 88 | Self-management: Poor diet (56.8%), poor exercise (34.1%), good stress (84.1%), good alcohol (97.7%), good smoking (84.1%), poor medication adherence (22.7%) | Traditional: Physical exercise, Dietary intake, Medication adherence, tobacco cessation, alcohol consumption, |
| Simanullang | To analyze the relationship of lifestyle and hypertension prevalence among older people | n=60 | Low physical activity (81.7%), unhealthy lifestyle (58.3%), and smoking (45%) | Traditional: Physical exercise and tobacco cessation |
| Lestari et al | To examine the relationship between medication adherence and hypertension status | n=55 | Salt consumption (1540±257.7 mg), unregular exercise (>73.9%), and did not adhere to medication (78.1%) | Traditional: Dietary intake, physical exercise, medication adherence |
| Priscilia & Sartika | To measure the effect of sleep duration on physical activity of hypertensive patients | n=97 | Less active (32%) and overweight (61.9%) | Traditional: Physical exercise and bodyweight management |
| Islami et al | To examine the relationship between diet quality and mental emotional disorder status with the prevalence of hypertension in women | n=143 | Low diet quality (86.1%) | Traditional: Dietary intake |
| Pangastuti et al | To compare sodium intake, physical activities, and psychological problems in patients with hypertension | n= 81 (rural) 74 (urban) | Excessive sodium intake from rural (32%) and urban (28.4%), vigorous activity level from rural (59%) and urban (27%), normal level of stress from rural (98.8%) and urban (95.9%) | Traditional: Dietary intake, physical exercise, |
| Ridha et al | To analyze the relationship between fruit and vegetable intake among older people | n=138 | Consumed fruit ≤ 2x/day (48.2%), consumed vegetables ≤ 3x/day (51.7%), overweight/obese (29.9%) | Traditional: Dietary intake and body weight management |
| Farapti et al | To analyze the association between both urinary and dietary (Na/K) ratio and BP among older women | n=51, M age = 56.98 year | The Urinary Na/K ratio of hypertensive patients was 6.01±1.89 [mmol/mmol] | Traditional: Dietary sodium intake |
| Adiyasa & Cruz | To analyze the correlation between self-care behavior and self-efficacy of adults with hypertension | n=120 | Medication adherence (mean score 3.93), Healthy dietary (mean score 3.63), Physical activities (mean score 3.52) were considered good. | Traditional: Medication adherence, dietary intake, physical exercise |
| Livana & Basthomi | To determine the triggering factors associated with hypertension | n=428 | Moderate level of obesity (43.2%) | Traditional: Bodyweight management |
| Prihandana et al | To determine patients’ self-care behavior toward hypertension | n=250 | Overweight (30.0%), obese (36%), low level of medication adherence (68%), high intensity of physical exercise (59.2%), did not exercise regularly (46.5), do not adhere to the recommended diet (58.8%), manage stress by praying (59.6) | Traditional: bodyweight management, medication adherence, physical exercise, dietary intake |
| Nugroho & Erniastutik | To determine the associated factors with hypertensive middle-aged patients in Indonesia | n=5401 | Current smoker (19.5), low physical activity (24%), | Traditional: tobacco cessation, physical exercise, bodyweight management |
| Gusty & Merdawati | To assess hypertension self-care behaviors and their associated factors among hypertensive patients | n=260 | Medication adherence (37.7%), low-salt diet (16.9%), physical activity (10.4%), not smoking (73.8%), body weight management (20.8%), did not consume alcohol (100%) | Traditional: Dietary intake, physical exercise, tobacco cessation, bodyweight management, and alcohol consumption |
| Defianna et al | To examine the prevalence of hypertension and associated factors among adult men and women | n= 4328 | High physical activity (71%), never smoke (69.5%), abdominal obesity (61.4%) | Traditional: Physical exercise, tobacco cessation, bodyweight management |
| Ramli et al | To assess medication adherence among patients undergoing hypertensive treatment | n=653 | Medication adherence (53.4%), obese (40.1%), overweight (38.9%), smokers (8.4%), alcohol users (5.5%) | Traditional: Medication adherence, bodyweight management, tobacco cessation, and alcohol consumption |
| Salihah & Mei | To determine the knowledge, awareness, and perception towards hypertension among residents in nursing homes | n=200 | Exercise regularly (46.5%), normal weight (58.0%), not smoking (85.0%) | Traditional: Medication adherence, physical exercise, bodyweight management, tobacco cessation, |
| Salim et al | To determine self-care profiles and their determinants among hypertensive patients | n=730 | Overweight (32.9%), obese (48.6), The mean total HTN-SCP score was 124.2 (SD 22.8) out of 180. | Traditional: Bodyweight management, other unspecified self-care behavior |
| Lim & Yong | To examine and compare the risk factors of hypertension | n=24,632 | Obese and overweight: undiagnosed and known hypertension | Traditional: Bodyweight management, physical exercise, tobacco cessation, alcohol consumption |
| Wu et al | To examine demographic and cardiovascular disease risk factors associated with awareness, treatment and control of hypertension in a multi-ethnic Asian population. | n=5022 | Hypertensive medication (84.4%), BMI ≥ of 27.5 | Traditional: Medication adherence, bodyweight management, tobacco cessation, and alcohol consumption |
| Malhotra et al | To assess the prevalence and correlates of hypertension and awareness, treatment, and control among older people | n=4,441 | Moderate risk of BMI (40.5%), high risk of BMI (23.4%) | Traditional: Bodyweight management |
| Son et al | To estimate mean blood Pressure, the prevalence of hypertension, and its awareness, treatment and control | n= 9832, Mage= 42.7 years (range=25–100) | Overweight (38.1%), obese (50.9%) | Traditional: Bodyweight management |
| Do et al | To identify the prevalence of hypertension and prehypertension and its determinants. | n=17,199, M age = 44 years (range=25–64) | Men (24.5%) and Women (17.5%) were current smokers. Men (25.1%) and Women (15.8%) did not drink alcohol | Traditional: Alcohol consumption, tobacco cessation |
| Nguyen et al | To explore the rate of uncontrolled hypertension and identified associated factors | n=220 | Did not smoke (87.7%), alcohol drinkers (28.6%), overweight/obesity (58%), did not adhere to medication (99.6%), did not follow a low-salt diet (50.5%), exercised regularly (85.0%) | Traditional: Tobacco cessation, Alcohol consumption, bodyweight management, medication adherence, dietary intake, physical exercise |
| Ko-Ko-Zaw et al | To determine the prevalence of hypertension and its associated factors | n=4616 | Medication consumption (32%), current smokers (24.9%), alcohol drinkers (47.1%), moderate physical activity (47%), overweight (29.9%), obese (11.8%) | Traditional: Medication adherence, tobacco cessation, alcohol consumption, physical exercise, bodyweight management |
| Han et al | To determine the prevalence of the adherence and to identify the factors related to medication adherence among hypertensive patients | n=216, M age= 52.8 years | Poor medication adherence (49.1%) | Traditional: Medication adherence, |
| Oo et al | To describe the relationships between personal and environmental factors and health behaviors in persons with hypertension | n=104, M age= 53.27 years (range= 21 to 80) | Moderate level of health behaviors (70.59 ± 12.39) | Unspecified |
| Haung et al | To identify the prevalence of self-care behaviors and their associated factors among hypertensive patients | n=410 | Did not adhere to medication (75.9%), low diet quality (62.2%), inadequate physical activity (75.1%), poor bodyweight management (90.5%), smoking (49.8%), did not drink alcohol (97.8%) | Traditional: Medication adherence, dietary intake, physical exercise, bodyweight management, tobacco cessation, and alcohol consumption |
| Apidechkul | To determine the prevalence of hypertension and its associated factors among older people | n=749 | Smoking (17.4%), drinking alcohol (13.3%), consumed salty food (85%), less active (58.7%), overweight (57.3%) | Traditional: Tobacco cessation, alcohol consumption, dietary intake, physical exercise, and body weight management |
| Visanuyothin et al | To determine the prevalence of hypertension and associated factors between appearance and home blood pressure | n=125 | Most patients had a Waist Circumference (WC) higher than the normal limit, BMIs ≥23 kg/m2, nondrinkers and nonsmokers | Traditional: Bodyweight management, tobacco cessation, alcohol consumption |
| Meelab et al | To determine the prevalence of uncontrolled hypertension and to assess its relationship with patient characteristics | n=406 | Never smoke (83.5%), never drink alcohol (71.9%), without any medication (17.7%), overweight (42.6%), obese (10.3%) | Traditional: Tobacco cessation, alcohol consumption, medication adherence, and bodyweight management |
| Chotisiri et al | To explore hypertension knowledge, attitudes, and practices | n=144 | Overweight (43.8%), consumed healthy diet (3–4 days/week) (50%), had physical exercise 1–2 times/week (91.0%), stress-relieving activities 1–2 times/week (87.5%) | Traditional: bodyweight management, dietary intake, physical exercise |
| Somprasong et al | To estimate the prevalence of HT and to determine the factors associated with HT among individuals from hill tribes | n=1287 | Overweight (67.7%), smoking (10.5%), were alcohol drinkers (11.5%), did not exercise (54.9%) used a lot of salt for cooking (35.5%), used a lot of oil for cooking (32.2%) | Traditional: Bodyweight management, tobacco cessation, alcohol consumption, physical exercise, dietary intake with a cultural approach |
| Rusmevichientong et al | To examine the dietary-salt-related determinants associated with the risk of hypertension | n=376 | Overweight (42.7%), obese (23.8%), consumed 5 days a week high dietary salt food (34.6%), often/always taste the food before seasoning, read the amount of salt on the nutrition label, did not add salt/fish sauce to the food (53.5%) | Traditional: Bodyweight management and dietary intake |
| Pengpid et al | To determine the national prevalence of hypertension and its awareness, treatment, and control | n=2543, M age=38.7 years (range= 18–64) | Medication consumption (18.2%), older age taking an herbal remedy (12.8%) | Traditional: Medication adherence |
| Wee et al | To compare hypertension self-care profiles in two populations in primary care settings from Singapore and Malaysia. | n= 1123 | On three or more than four antihypertensive medications: Malaysia (20.9%) and Singapore (14.3%) Overweight: Malaysia (34.3%) and Singapore (33.9) Obese: Malaysia (47.8%) and Singapore (43.1%) The mean total score of HTN-SCP: Malaysia | Traditional: Medication adherence and bodyweight management |
| Rahman et al | To gain a deeper understanding of hypertension management in Asia (Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, and The Philippines) | n= 110 | Motivations for implementing hypertension management. See | Unspecified |
Note: aArticle in Bahasa; HTN-SCP: hypertension self-care profile.
Articles Exploring Self-Care Management for Hypertension (Qualitative Studies)
| Author, Year | Aim | Sample (n, M Age, Range) and Setting | Findings | Self-Care Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mizutani et al | To explore healthy-lifestyle behaviors as perceived by Muslim married couples with hypertension | n=12 couples, M age = 51.2 years (range= 40–64) | Eating behavior, physical activity, resting, not smoking, managing stress, seeking health information, seeking health care, caring for other people, and fulfilling an obligation to God were implemented healthy lifestyle | Traditional: Physical exercise, Dietary intake, tobacco cessation, stress-relieving |
| Rahmawati & Bajorek | To explore perspectives of hypertension from people who do not consume their medication | n=30, ≥45 years | Reluctance to take anti-hypertensive medications. Details at | Traditional: Medication adherence |
| Kurnia et al | To explore the experiences of barriers to hypertension management in the Minangkabau ethnic group | n=12 | Lack of self-motivation in the management of hypertension. Details in | Traditional: Dietary intake |
| Berek & Afiyanti | To explore inhibiting and barrier of hypertensive patient self-care compliant | n=5 | Inhibiting and barrier of self-care. See | Traditional: Medication adherence, dietary intake |
| Sulistyaningrum et al | To understand the behavior of hypertensive patients | n=6 | Participants have implemented A low salt diet, cessation of cigarette and alcohol consumption, increase in activity and exercise, regulation of sleep and rest needs, application of stress control methods, and hypertension treatment and care | Traditional: Dietary intake, tobacco cessation, alcohol consumption, physical exercise treatment adherence |
| Shima et al | To explore patients’ experiences with hypertension and reasons for not following self-care recommendations | n=25 | Reasons for not following self-care recommendations. See | Traditional: Medication adherence, dietary intake, physical exercise |
| Tan et al | To explore hypertensive patients’ perspectives on medication usage and hypertension management | n=17 | Poor medication adherence and Herbal consumption was chosen over medication | Traditional: Medication adherence |
| Tan et al | To explore the perceived social and physical environments of low socio-economic status of older people with hypertension | n=22 | Social and physical environments of hypertensive older patients. See | Traditional: Culturally diet intake, physical exercise, medication adherence |
| Woodham et al | To understand reasons for poor adherence and home self-management of hypertensive older people | n=30 (range =60–79) | Reasons for poor medication adherence. See | Traditional: Medication adherence |
| Sadang et al | To explore the common self-care hypertension practices of the Meranao tribe during the Covid-19 pandemic | n=10 | Self-care practice: use of herbal remedies, Compliance with prescribed medications, Dietary control, physical activity active. | Traditional: Medication adherence, dietary intake, physical exercise with a cultural approach |
The Facilitating and Inhibiting Factors of Self-Care Management for Hypertension
| Factors | Theme | Sub-Theme | Sources | Quotations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Facilitating | Internal sources | Put reminder not to forget | Tan et al; | I keep it in a plastic bag. I will write or record in a book when taking medicine to avoid forgetting because I am a stroke patient; |
| Motivation to avoid progression | Tan et al; | If you do not protect yourself, who would protect? Others cannot protect you … If [you have] high blood pressure and do not control yourself, if [you] collapse … heart does not die, body dies … So, you just lay there and it’s awful … and become a burden to others; | ||
| External Sources | Having discussion partner | Tan et al; | I prefer to share my medication problem with member of the NGO because they know me well; | |
| Organized activities by the health center | Berek & Afiyanti; | …. at the public health center, usually every Saturday there is an elderly exercise program, so I joined there …; | ||
| Inhibiting | Internal sources | Self-care practice is not a priority | Shima et al; | Taking medication is not a priority in my daily routine; |
| Side effects and feeling tired of medication | Shima et al; | I got tired easily and had no mood. I also experienced neatness, palpitations, and sweating with the medication; | ||
| No sign and symptoms | Woodham et al; | I do not feel like I need to take medicine because I do not have any signs or symptoms. I do not have headache or anything. I do not see reason why I need to take medicine; | ||
| Financial barrier | Mizutani et al; | I want a variation of menu, but I cannot afford it. I have similar menu for breakfast, lunch, and dinner; | ||
| Time barrier | Mizutani et al; | I am too busy for my life … I work from 9.00 to 17.00. I want to walk in the morning before working, but I cannot because I am busy; | ||
| External Sources | Not adjusted to the culture | S. T. Tan et al; | They advise taking this like … Oat, green veggies that Chinese like to take as soup, steamed fish … We Malays cannot eat like that … You know Malays must eat with chilies, without chilies we cannot eat right; | |
| Distance barrier | Tan et al; | I have problem in getting transportation because hospital is too far; | ||
| Lack of support from family | Shima et al; | My wife still cooks food high in salt and fats although she knows I have hypertension; | ||
| Lack of knowledge | Rahmawati & Bajorek; | Honestly, I expect the midwife to give me specific instructions about medicines that can decrease my blood pressure. The truth is, the midwife never told me to take any hypertensive medications; |
Figure 2The framework of hypertension self-care practices inhibiting and facilitating factors in South East Asia. *Factors of not adhering to medication. **Factors of poor physical exercise. ***Factors of overweight/obese and poor/low-quality dietary intake.