Objectives This systematic review aims to evaluate the evidence of non-pharmacological strategies to improve blood pressure (BP) control in patients with hypertension from African countries. Design We performed a systematic review and searched Medline, Central, CINAHL and study registers until June 2020 for randomised studies on interventions to decrease BP of patients with hypertension in African countries. We assessed the study quality using the Cochrane risk of bias tool and narratively synthesised studies on non-pharmacological hypertension interventions. Setting We included studies conducted in African countries. Participants Adult African patients with a hypertension diagnosis. Interventions Studies on non-pharmacological interventions aiming to improve BP control and treatment adherence. Outcomes Main outcomes were BP and treatment adherence. Results We identified 5564 references, included 23 with altogether 18 153 participants from six African countries. The studies investigated educational strategies to improve adherence (11 studies) and treatment by healthcare professionals (5 studies), individualised treatment strategies (2 studies), strategies on lifestyle including physical activity (4 studies) and modified nutrition (1 study). Nearly all studies on educational strategies stated improved adherence, but only three studies showed a clinically relevant improvement of BP control. All studies on individualised strategies and lifestyle changes resulted in clinically relevant effects on BP. Due to the type of interventions studied, risk of bias in domain blinding of staff/participants was frequent (83%). Though incomplete outcome data in 61% of the studies are critical, the general study quality was reasonable. Conclusions The identified studies offer diverse low-cost interventions including educative and task-shifting strategies, individualised treatment and lifestyle modifications to improve BP control. Especially trialled physical activity interventions show clinically relevant BP changes. All strategies were trialled in African countries and may be used for recommendations in evidence-based guidelines on hypertension in African settings. PROSPERO registration number CRD42018075062.
CITATION STYLE
Cernota, M., Kroeber, E. S., Demeke, T., Frese, T., Getachew, S., Kantelhardt, E. J., … Unverzagt, S. (2022, February 28). Non-pharmacological interventions to achieve blood pressure control in African patients: A systematic review. BMJ Open. BMJ Publishing Group. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-048079
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