An 8-week volunteer-led community program significantly improved motivational readiness for physical activity (P<0.001), healthy eating (P=0.001), and hypertension knowledge (P<0.0005) vs control.
RCT (n=185)
batch randomized
Does an 8-week community program implemented by trained volunteers improve motivational readiness, perceived competence, and knowledge for hypertension self-management in patients with hypertension?
An 8-week peer-led community program significantly improves psychosocial determinants of health behavior, including motivational readiness and perceived competence, for hypertension self-management.
p-value: p=<.001
This article describes the impact of an 8-week community program implemented by trained volunteers on the hypertension self-management of 185 patients who were batch randomized to intervention or wait-list control groups. Compared with control group participants, a higher proportion of treatment group participants moved from the cognitive to behavioral stages of motivational readiness for being physically active (P < .001), practicing healthy eating habits (P = .001), handling stress well (P = .001), and living an overall healthy lifestyle (P = .003). They also demonstrated a greater average increase in perceived competence for self-management, F(1.134) = 4.957, P = .028, η2 = .036, and a greater increase in mean hypertension-related knowledge, F(1.160) = 16.571, P < .0005, η(2) = .094. Enduring lifestyle changes necessary for chronic disease self-management require that psychosocial determinants of health behavior are instilled, which is typically beyond standard medical practice. We recommend peer-led, community-based programs as a complement to clinical care and support the increasing health system interest in promoting population health beyond clinical walls.
Dye et al. (Wed,) conducted a rct in hypertension (n=185). 8-week community program implemented by trained volunteers vs. wait-list control was evaluated on movement from cognitive to behavioral stages of motivational readiness for being physically active (p=<.001). An 8-week volunteer-led community program significantly improved motivational readiness for physical activity (P<0.001), healthy eating (P=0.001), and hypertension knowledge (P<0.0005) vs control.
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