Health Behavior Change after Blood Pressure Feedback.
Pubmed ID: 26501350
Pubmed Central ID: PMC4621021
Journal: PloS one
Publication Date: Oct. 26, 2015
MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Hypertension, Blood Pressure, Alcohol Drinking, Health Behavior, Antihypertensive Agents, Blood Pressure Determination
Grants: UL1 TR000427, P2C HD047873
Authors: Vanness DJ, Pu J, Chewning BA, Johnson HM, Young HN, Kreling DH
Cite As: Pu J, Chewning BA, Johnson HM, Vanness DJ, Young HN, Kreling DH. Health Behavior Change after Blood Pressure Feedback. PLoS One 2015 Oct 26;10(10):e0141217. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0141217. eCollection 2015.
Studies:
Abstract
Better understanding is needed for antihypertensive medication initiation and lifestyle modification among younger populations with elevated blood pressure. This study aimed to assess health behavior change after receiving a report of elevated blood pressure among African Americans and Caucasians younger than 50 years old. We used the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) repository dataset. By examination year twenty, 424 out of 2,478 Caucasian and 2,637 African American participants had received feedback from the CARDIA study due to elevated blood pressure readings. Blood pressure was measured by trained CARDIA researchers at the participant's home and was repeatedly recorded at seven examinations over twenty years. A feedback/referral letter was sent to participants with an elevated blood pressure reading. On average, participants first had an elevated blood pressure reading at the age of 34. After receiving the feedback letter, 44% of the previously undiagnosed participants received a formal diagnosis. In addition, 23% initiated the use of antihypertensive medication if they had not received medication treatment before. Among the participants with at-risk lifestyle behaviors, 40% reduced alcohol consumption, 14% increased exercise level, 11% stopped smoking, and 8% reached normal weight. While none of the studied patient factors were associated with lifestyle modification, age had a positive impact on antihypertensive medication initiation (p<0.05). We found no evidence of differences in health behavior change between African American and Caucasian participants after receiving the feedback letter. This research is one of the first to study what followed after receiving a feedback letter about elevated blood pressure outside of healthcare settings. Although additional referral care and behavior interventions are needed to facilitate medication initiation and lifestyle modification, our observations suggest that providing blood pressure feedback may have promise as part of a multi-method approach involving blood pressure screening and follow up.