The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Optimizing a digital intervention for managing blood pressure in stroke patients using a diverse sample: Integrating the person‐based approach and patient and public involvement

Optimizing a digital intervention for managing blood pressure in stroke patients using a diverse sample: Integrating the person‐based approach and patient and public involvement
Optimizing a digital intervention for managing blood pressure in stroke patients using a diverse sample: Integrating the person‐based approach and patient and public involvement
Background: having a stroke or transient ischaemic attack increases the risk of a subsequent one, especially with high blood pressure (BP). Home‐based BP management can be effective at maintaining optimal BP.

Objective: to describe the optimization of a digital intervention for stroke patients and the value of participant diversity, using the person‐based approach (PBA) and integral patient and public involvement (PPI).

Setting and participants: stroke patients recruited from primary care and community settings, and health‐care professionals in primary care, in England and Ireland.

Design: three linked qualitative studies conducted iteratively to develop an intervention using the PBA, with integral PPI.

Intervention: the BP: Together intervention, adapted from existing BP self‐monitoring interventions, is delivered via mobile phone or web interface to support self‐monitoring of BP at home. It alerts patients and their clinicians when a change in antihypertensive medication is needed.

Findings: feedback from a diverse range of participants identified potential barriers, which were addressed to improve the intervention accessibility, feasibility and persuasiveness. Easy‐to‐read materials were developed to improve usability for patients with aphasia and lower literacy. The importance of including family members who support patient care was also highlighted. Feedback messages regarding medication change were refined to ensure usefulness for patients and clinicians.

Discussion: input from PPI alongside qualitative research with a diverse study sample allowed the creation of a simple and equitable BP management intervention for stroke patients.

Patient involvement: two PPI co‐investigators contributed to design, conduct of study, data interpretation and manuscript preparation; community PPI sessions informed early planning. Study participants were stroke patients and family members.
1369-6513
Rai, Tanvi
1bd431fd-d30d-42be-91a2-fad6325d7e31
Morton, Kate
6fa41cd3-ba4d-476c-9020-b8ef93c7ade7
Roman, Cristian
8dfcc694-928f-48d5-b226-10d35e3b1470
Doogue, Roisin
be1bbce0-892c-4d39-b804-a0dad3b8de3d
Rice, Cathy
cfb0acc9-2bc3-4279-89bf-1074384f00de
Williams, Marney
0b04695e-c110-4e97-aab9-b741dc49e9f7
Schwartz, Claire
a9df9973-e556-4bf2-ba1a-8c4d8346e3d8
Velardo, Carmelo
57266feb-8387-43c7-9d98-df28971f0e03
Tarassenko, Lionel
2fc74dff-9b06-410f-92f5-63f2270a091c
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
McManus, Richard J.
481f6284-d599-4c77-8869-d1c6b63b9b02
Hinton, Lisa
96d960e8-4b9f-41bf-8d2e-0bdb2864c488
Rai, Tanvi
1bd431fd-d30d-42be-91a2-fad6325d7e31
Morton, Kate
6fa41cd3-ba4d-476c-9020-b8ef93c7ade7
Roman, Cristian
8dfcc694-928f-48d5-b226-10d35e3b1470
Doogue, Roisin
be1bbce0-892c-4d39-b804-a0dad3b8de3d
Rice, Cathy
cfb0acc9-2bc3-4279-89bf-1074384f00de
Williams, Marney
0b04695e-c110-4e97-aab9-b741dc49e9f7
Schwartz, Claire
a9df9973-e556-4bf2-ba1a-8c4d8346e3d8
Velardo, Carmelo
57266feb-8387-43c7-9d98-df28971f0e03
Tarassenko, Lionel
2fc74dff-9b06-410f-92f5-63f2270a091c
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
McManus, Richard J.
481f6284-d599-4c77-8869-d1c6b63b9b02
Hinton, Lisa
96d960e8-4b9f-41bf-8d2e-0bdb2864c488

Rai, Tanvi, Morton, Kate, Roman, Cristian, Doogue, Roisin, Rice, Cathy, Williams, Marney, Schwartz, Claire, Velardo, Carmelo, Tarassenko, Lionel, Yardley, Lucy, McManus, Richard J. and Hinton, Lisa (2020) Optimizing a digital intervention for managing blood pressure in stroke patients using a diverse sample: Integrating the person‐based approach and patient and public involvement. Health Expectations. (doi:10.1111/hex.13173).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: having a stroke or transient ischaemic attack increases the risk of a subsequent one, especially with high blood pressure (BP). Home‐based BP management can be effective at maintaining optimal BP.

Objective: to describe the optimization of a digital intervention for stroke patients and the value of participant diversity, using the person‐based approach (PBA) and integral patient and public involvement (PPI).

Setting and participants: stroke patients recruited from primary care and community settings, and health‐care professionals in primary care, in England and Ireland.

Design: three linked qualitative studies conducted iteratively to develop an intervention using the PBA, with integral PPI.

Intervention: the BP: Together intervention, adapted from existing BP self‐monitoring interventions, is delivered via mobile phone or web interface to support self‐monitoring of BP at home. It alerts patients and their clinicians when a change in antihypertensive medication is needed.

Findings: feedback from a diverse range of participants identified potential barriers, which were addressed to improve the intervention accessibility, feasibility and persuasiveness. Easy‐to‐read materials were developed to improve usability for patients with aphasia and lower literacy. The importance of including family members who support patient care was also highlighted. Feedback messages regarding medication change were refined to ensure usefulness for patients and clinicians.

Discussion: input from PPI alongside qualitative research with a diverse study sample allowed the creation of a simple and equitable BP management intervention for stroke patients.

Patient involvement: two PPI co‐investigators contributed to design, conduct of study, data interpretation and manuscript preparation; community PPI sessions informed early planning. Study participants were stroke patients and family members.

Text
digital optimization
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (783kB)

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 November 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 December 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 445979
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/445979
ISSN: 1369-6513
PURE UUID: 460fe4bf-0c4f-4861-b04b-c72f65c57a04
ORCID for Kate Morton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6674-0314
ORCID for Lucy Yardley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3853-883X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 18 Jan 2021 17:30
Last modified: 21 Sep 2024 01:49

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Tanvi Rai
Author: Kate Morton ORCID iD
Author: Cristian Roman
Author: Roisin Doogue
Author: Cathy Rice
Author: Marney Williams
Author: Claire Schwartz
Author: Carmelo Velardo
Author: Lionel Tarassenko
Author: Lucy Yardley ORCID iD
Author: Richard J. McManus
Author: Lisa Hinton

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×