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Using qualitative research and the person-based approach to coproduce an inclusive intervention for postpartum blood pressure self-management

Using qualitative research and the person-based approach to coproduce an inclusive intervention for postpartum blood pressure self-management
Using qualitative research and the person-based approach to coproduce an inclusive intervention for postpartum blood pressure self-management
Objective: to coproduce an inclusive intervention for blood pressure (BP) self-management post partum.

Design: using the person-based approach, an intervention was coproduced in three phases. Phase 1 entailed intervention coproduction with a diverse patient and public involvement panel and stakeholders (clinical, academic, government and third sector-based). Phase 2 involved intervention optimisation through think-aloud interviews with former patients and clinicians. Phase 3 was user-testing followed by semistructured interviews with current patients and their clinicians.

Setting: patients and clinicians from primary and secondary care drawn from Southern and Northern England.

Participants: seven former patients and 11 clinicians participated in think-aloud interviews to provide their views of intervention prototypes (phase 2). Additionally, 23 patients and 9 of their clinicians participated in semistructured interviews after using the intervention for 2 weeks (phase 3).

Intervention: an interactive patient app—My BP Care—and accompanying leaflet to support BP self-monitoring. These were linked to a clinician dashboard with alerts and an emailing system to facilitate appropriate titration of patient medication.

Results: the intervention was codeveloped following these guiding principles to ensure it was accessible and inclusive: easily comprehensible, motivating, simple and quick to use. Interview findings indicated that patient adherence to the intervention was promoted by the initial patient training conducted by the midwives, the enhanced clinical oversight they felt they received as a result of the intervention, the free BP monitor they received, reassurance they received of the medication safety for them and their baby, the intervention’s simplicity and the motivating reminders they received.

Conclusions Through coproduction with a diverse group of patients and stakeholders, and optimisation through testing among further diverse patients and clinicians, we developed a multicomponent intervention that is accessible and engaging for diverse patients, compatible with prevailing clinical practice and adaptable to different clinical contexts.
Behavior, Patient Participation, Postpartum Women, QUALITATIVE RESEARCH, Self-Management, Telemedicine
2044-6055
Ochieng, Cynthia Akelo
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Burke, Carol
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Green, Marcus
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Igwe, Sandra
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Tucker, Katherine L.
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Hinton, Lisa
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Goddard, Lucy
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Roman, Cristian
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McManus, Richard J.
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Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Ochieng, Cynthia Akelo
a379f0df-49ab-417a-bb24-2d868ef6b123
Burke, Carol
d8926ffe-1a87-4f3b-9c84-1915345f796c
Green, Marcus
c6b6ff94-0a7d-4da9-b90a-688a7b6dfe32
Igwe, Sandra
2a319af1-222e-45d7-9df3-be1bd0684712
Tucker, Katherine L.
990b0f31-7275-4261-8917-33b6e3002db0
Hinton, Lisa
177e60b0-f34c-4c40-b3b4-c130eea37f93
Goddard, Lucy
3c668a69-85ba-4cfc-a10e-27cede6b670c
Roman, Cristian
346e30e2-0720-4e1f-a676-c7801e16ce9b
McManus, Richard J.
481f6284-d599-4c77-8869-d1c6b63b9b02
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e

Ochieng, Cynthia Akelo, Burke, Carol, Green, Marcus, Igwe, Sandra, Tucker, Katherine L., Hinton, Lisa, Goddard, Lucy, Roman, Cristian, McManus, Richard J. and Yardley, Lucy (2025) Using qualitative research and the person-based approach to coproduce an inclusive intervention for postpartum blood pressure self-management. BMJ Open, 15 (6), [e098162]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2024-098162).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to coproduce an inclusive intervention for blood pressure (BP) self-management post partum.

Design: using the person-based approach, an intervention was coproduced in three phases. Phase 1 entailed intervention coproduction with a diverse patient and public involvement panel and stakeholders (clinical, academic, government and third sector-based). Phase 2 involved intervention optimisation through think-aloud interviews with former patients and clinicians. Phase 3 was user-testing followed by semistructured interviews with current patients and their clinicians.

Setting: patients and clinicians from primary and secondary care drawn from Southern and Northern England.

Participants: seven former patients and 11 clinicians participated in think-aloud interviews to provide their views of intervention prototypes (phase 2). Additionally, 23 patients and 9 of their clinicians participated in semistructured interviews after using the intervention for 2 weeks (phase 3).

Intervention: an interactive patient app—My BP Care—and accompanying leaflet to support BP self-monitoring. These were linked to a clinician dashboard with alerts and an emailing system to facilitate appropriate titration of patient medication.

Results: the intervention was codeveloped following these guiding principles to ensure it was accessible and inclusive: easily comprehensible, motivating, simple and quick to use. Interview findings indicated that patient adherence to the intervention was promoted by the initial patient training conducted by the midwives, the enhanced clinical oversight they felt they received as a result of the intervention, the free BP monitor they received, reassurance they received of the medication safety for them and their baby, the intervention’s simplicity and the motivating reminders they received.

Conclusions Through coproduction with a diverse group of patients and stakeholders, and optimisation through testing among further diverse patients and clinicians, we developed a multicomponent intervention that is accessible and engaging for diverse patients, compatible with prevailing clinical practice and adaptable to different clinical contexts.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 May 2025
Published date: 24 June 2025
Keywords: Behavior, Patient Participation, Postpartum Women, QUALITATIVE RESEARCH, Self-Management, Telemedicine

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504229
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504229
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: fdabfd4c-d7df-4a22-be33-0e77015efe3e
ORCID for Lucy Yardley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3853-883X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Sep 2025 16:44
Last modified: 02 Sep 2025 01:37

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Contributors

Author: Cynthia Akelo Ochieng
Author: Carol Burke
Author: Marcus Green
Author: Sandra Igwe
Author: Katherine L. Tucker
Author: Lisa Hinton
Author: Lucy Goddard
Author: Cristian Roman
Author: Richard J. McManus
Author: Lucy Yardley ORCID iD

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