Volunteers from a resident health committee in an apartment complex community carried out door-to-door blood pressure screening of residents. Their results were compared with those from a community where a resident health committee conducted central site screenings and with those of a community where nonresident researchers manned a central screening site. Door-to-door screening by community volunteers was significantly more effective than the two central site screening methods which did not differ from each other. Follow-up measures increased the number of hypertensives who reported seeking treatment by 100 per cent.
CITATION STYLE
Cooke, C. J., & Meyers, A. (1983). The role of community volunteers in health interventions: A hypertension screening and follow-up program. American Journal of Public Health, 73(2), 193–194. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.73.2.193
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