Text messages can help reduce blood pressure
An Oxford University led study, working with the
University of Cape Town in South Africa, has found that text message reminders
can help reduce people’s blood pressure.
The study, of over
1300 adults with high blood pressure in the Cape Town area, compared text
message reminders and interactive text messaging to a control group receiving
standard care. The results appear online in the American Heart Association journal Circulation.
Professor Andrew
Farmer, from Oxford’s Department of Primary Health Care Sciences explained:
'High blood pressure is a common condition that can be managed successfully
with tablets. Yet, even in health systems where that medication is freely
available, people can struggle to keep taking the tablets regularly.
'Two common issues
are not turning up to collect medicine – so running out – or forgetting to take
tablets. We knew that text messages had worked to support people with HIV/Aids
to stick to their treatment and improve their health as a result. We wanted to
see whether the messages could work for blood pressure treatment in a deprived community.'
In the area of
Cape Town chosen for the trial, around a third of families live in shacks and
almost two thirds have a monthly income less than 3500 Rand (£150 /$215). The
clinic that serves the area provides free health services and medication.
Patients were
randomly split into three equal-sized groups. All patients received written
information about high blood pressure and healthy living. The first group then
received weekly messages at a time and in the language they chose (Afrikaans,
English, or isiXhosa). The messages, designed in consultation with people in
low-income communities in the area, encouraged patients to collect and take
their medication and educated them about hypertension and its treatment. Extra
messages were sent to remind people when medicine was ready for collection or when
they had a clinic appointment.
The second group
received the same text messages but were able to interact with the automated
service by calling to change or cancel appointments or change the language or
time of the messages. The third group received standard care.
Health
workers used mobile phones linked to blood pressure measuring devices to
collect health information about patients, and text messaging was managed
automatically using an affordable system developed by Oxford's Institute of
Biomedical Engineering.
After
twelve months, all three groups had reduced blood pressure. However, those who
had received text messages had a slightly greater reduction in their blood
pressure and were more likely to have achieved a controlled blood pressure.
Those who had had reminders were also more likely to have taken their medicine
at least 80% of the time – almost two thirds of those getting information
messages reached that standard compared to just under half of those receiving
standard care.
Professor
Farmer said: 'The improvements seen were equivalent to those expected from
intensive one-to-one behavioural counselling, which is usually more expensive.
When we consider that those good at sticking to treatment are 20% less likely
to die prematurely than those who don’t manage that, any relatively low-cost
intervention that helps people manage their high blood pressure successfully
can save the very real personal, social and economic costs of the disease.'
Professor
Lionel Tarassenko from Oxford's Institute of Biomedical Engineering said 'There
is a great potential for mobile phone technology to help with the management of
chronic diseases world-wide through automated messaging to the right person at
the right time. With this study, we have demonstrated how this could be done in
an area where large numbers of people are at risk because of uncontrolled blood
pressure.'
The
Oxford team say that further research into the optimum frequency and content of
messages, and the costs of operation, are now needed.
In
a linked editorial for Circulation, Julie C. Lauffenburger and Niteesh
K. Choudhry, from Harvard Medical School say the study is an important
scientific contribution and demonstrates the ability to conduct trials of
mobile technology with rigour. They add: 'The investigators should also be
commended for their use of pragmatic methods (including limited inclusion and
exclusion criteria and relatively simple methods for outcome assessment) and
design techniques (such as minimization) that are state-of-the-art for more
traditional efficacy trials. Perhaps most importantly, the trial was also
conducted in a resource-poor setting in which less evidence is available than
in higher income countries.'
This
trial is supported by the Oxford Centre of Excellence in Medical Engineering
funded by the Wellcome Trust and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
Council.
Original Article
Source | http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/early/2016/01/14/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.017530
Regards
Pralhad Jadhav
Senior Librarian
Khaitan & Co
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