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Facilitators and barriers to hypertension self-management in urban African Americans: perspectives of patients and family members.

机译:城市非洲裔美国人高血压自我管理的促进者和障碍:患者和家庭成员的观点。

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摘要

INTRODUCTION: We aimed to inform the design of behavioral interventions by identifying patients' and their family members' perceived facilitators and barriers to hypertension self-management. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted focus groups of African American patients with hypertension and their family members to elicit their views about factors influencing patients' hypertension self-management. We recruited African American patients with hypertension (n = 18) and their family members (n = 12) from an urban, community-based clinical practice in Baltimore, Maryland. We conducted four separate 90-minute focus groups among patients with controlled (one group) and uncontrolled (one group) hypertension, as well as their family members (two groups). Trained moderators used open-ended questions to assess participants' perceptions regarding patient, family, clinic, and community-level factors influencing patients' effective hypertension self-management. RESULTS: Patient participants identified several facilitators (including family members' support and positive relationships with doctors) and barriers (including competing health priorities, lack of knowledge about hypertension, and poor access to community resources) that influence their hypertension self-management. Family members also identified several facilitators (including their participation in patients' doctor's visits and discussions with patients' doctors outside of visits) and barriers (including their own limited health knowledge and patients' lack of motivation to sustain hypertension self-management behaviors) that affect their efforts to support patients' hypertension self-management. CONCLUSION: African American patients with hypertension and their family members reported numerous patient, family, clinic, and community-level facilitators and barriers to patients' hypertension self-management. Patients' and their family members' views may help guide efforts to tailor behavioral interventions designed to improve hypertension self-management behaviors and hypertension control in minority populations.
机译:简介:我们旨在通过识别患者及其家人的感知促进因素和高血压自我管理的障碍,为行为干预的设计提供依据。材料与方法:我们进行了非裔美国人高血压患者及其家属的焦点小组研究,以征询他们对影响患者高血压自我管理因素的看法。我们从马里兰州巴尔的摩市的一个城市社区临床实践中招募了非洲裔美国人高血压患者(n = 18)及其家人(n = 12)。我们对患有控制性高血压(一组)和未控制性高血压(一组)的患者及其家庭成员(两组)进行了四个单独的90分钟焦点小组讨论。受过训练的主持人使用开放性问题来评估参与者对影响患者有效高血压自我管理的患者,家庭,诊所和社区级因素的看法。结果:患者参与者确定了影响其高血压自我管理的几个促进因素(包括家庭成员的支持和与医生的积极关系)和障碍(包括相互竞争的健康优先事项,对高血压的了解不足以及难以获得社区资源)。家庭成员还确定了一些促进因素(包括他们参加患者的医生就诊以及在就诊之外与患者医生的讨论)和障碍(包括他们自身的健康知识有限以及患者缺乏维持高血压自我管理行为的动力)他们努力支持患者的高血压自我管理。结论:非洲裔美国高血压患者及其家庭成员报告了许多患者,家庭,诊所和社区一级的促进者,以及患者自我管理的障碍。患者及其家人的观点可能有助于指导努力制定行为干预措施,以改善少数人群的高血压自我管理行为和高血压控制。

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