A community health coach program for rural residents >60 years significantly reduced systolic blood pressure (-5.781 mmHg; p=0.001) and increased controlled hypertension from 40.4% to 51.0%.
Observational (n=146)
Does a community health coach program improve hypertension self-management, blood pressure, and related health metrics in rural older adults with hypertension?
A community health coach program significantly improved systolic blood pressure, weight, glucose, and hypertension control in rural older adults.
Absolute Event Rate: 51% vs 40.4%
Approximately two thirds of those older than 60 years have a hypertension diagnosis. The aim of our program, Health Coaches for Hypertension Control, is to improve hypertension self-management among rural residents older than 60 years through education and support offered by trained community volunteers called Health Coaches. Participants received baseline and follow-up health risk appraisals with blood work, educational materials, and items such as blood pressure monitors and pedometers. Data were collected at baseline, 8 weeks, and 16 weeks on 146 participants who demonstrated statistically significant increases in hypertension-related knowledge from baseline to 8 weeks that persisted at 16 weeks, as well as significant improvements in stage of readiness to change behaviors and in actual behaviors. Furthermore, clinically significant decreases in all outcome measures were observed, with statistically significant changes in systolic blood pressure (-5.781 mmHg; p = .001), weight (-2.475 lb; p < .001), and glucose (-5.096 mg/dl; p = .004) after adjusting for multiple comparisons. Although 40.4% of participants met the Healthy People 2020 definition of controlled hypertension at baseline, the proportion of participants meeting this definition at 16 weeks postintervention increased to 51.0%. This article describes a university-community-hospital system model that effectively promotes hypertension self-management in a rural Appalachian community.
Dye et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Hypertension (n=146). Health Coaches for Hypertension Control vs. Baseline was evaluated on Controlled hypertension. A community health coach program for rural residents >60 years significantly reduced systolic blood pressure (-5.781 mmHg; p=0.001) and increased controlled hypertension from 40.4% to 51.0%.
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