Health coaching to improve hypertension treatment in a low-income, minority population

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Abstract

PURPOSE Poor blood pressure control is common in the United States. We conducted a study to determine whether health coaching with home titration of antihypertensive medications can improve blood pressure control compared with health coaching alone in a low-income, predominantly minority population. METHODS We randomized 237 patients with poorly controlled hypertension at a primary care clinic to receive either home blood pressure monitoring, weekly health coaching, and home titration of blood pressure medications if blood pressures were elevated (n = 129) vs home blood pressure monitoring and health coaching but no home titration (n = 108). The primary outcome was change in systolic blood pressure from baseline to 6 months. RESULTS Both the home-titration arm and the no-home-titration arm had a reduction in systolic blood pressure, with no significant difference between them. When both arms were combined and analyzed as a before-after study, there was a mean decrease in systolic blood pressure of 21.8 mm Hg (P

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Margolius, D., Bodenheimer, T., Bennett, H., Wong, J., Ngo, V., Padilla, G., & Thom, D. H. (2012). Health coaching to improve hypertension treatment in a low-income, minority population. Annals of Family Medicine, 10(3), 199–205. https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.1369

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