Hypertension (HTN) has a greater impact on African Americans (AA) than any other U.S. racial group. Uncontrolled blood pressure (BP) contributes to higher rates of disability, death, and health resource use among AA. HTN is the single most influential risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), as well as a risk factor for the incidence of stroke, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, and dementia. Importantly, older adults account for 15% of the U.S. population, and two-thirds of older adults over age 60 have HTN, with higher rates observed in AA older adults. Strategies to support self-managing HTN and BP control are crucial as the older population is projected to age considerably and become more racially and ethnically diverse. Research has documented the negative effects on health and health outcomes of poorly controlled BP and is one of the most important modifiable CVD risk factors. Lower BP targets will require aggressive management and an increase in antihypertensive medications. Therefore, to achieve lower targets in this population, greater efforts, including patient-centered methods will be needed to support self-managing HTN, especially in terms of medication adherence. As we shifted into the digital age, the use of mHealth technologies (smart phones, applications, SMS or text messaging) has been a powerful approach and mechanism for the treatment and management of chronic diseases. However, behavioral interventions that incorporate technology do not reach minorities or disadvantaged AA older adults with HTN. OPtimizing Technology to Improve Medication Adherence and BP Control (OPTIMA-BP) will leverage existing knowledge of effective technology-based components for HTN self-management to support and improve BP control using unique aspects of mHealth platforms in AA older adults. Findings from this study, if confirmed, will improve BP control and support self-managing HTN, as well as has the potential to close the health disparity gap between AA and non-AA older adults with HTN.
OPTIMA-BP investigates the effectiveness of a technology-based intervention (TBI) for hypertension self-management and to improve blood pressure (BP) control. The investigators aims to: 1. To test the effects of OPTIMA-BP over a 12-month period vs. a 6 month waitlist control (WL) on systolic BP and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in African American older adults with HTN in a prospective, randomized control trial. 2. To test if the attitudinal/knowledge mechanisms of self-management (HTN knowledge, self-efficacy, perceived social support) and proximal behavioral target mechanisms (taking medications to reduce systolic BP, diet, exercise) mediate OPTIMA-BP vs. WL's impact on the primary and secondary outcomes (systolic BP, diastolic BP, HRQOL, serum lipids, and at least 62% of the sample with BP \<130/80 mmHg) over a 12-month period. The investigator also aims to: 3\. Utilize qualitative evaluation to confirm self-management barriers and perceived strengths or limitations of the intervention, which will inform future refinements should these randomized controlled trial (RCT) findings be positive
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
208
Participants will continue their regular medical care, supplemented by the OPTIMA-BP intervention: 1. Six weekly web-based education sessions on hypertension management. 2. Access to Medisafe, a medication management application (app) with a personalized medication adherence support (SMS reminder messages, adherence feedback, etc.) for 6 months. 3. Home Blood Pressure Monitoring (Omron series 10 home BP monitor). Participants will be asked to monitor and record their BP, 2x daily (AM and PM), twice a week, in a tracking log for 6 months. 4. Nurse Counseling Session with a research nurse for informal counseling, social support, and follow-up sessions regarding progress. 5. Optimizing HTN Treatment with 208 AA participants, in conjunction with their physician to maintain treatment goal BP: \< 130/80 mmHg. based on current HTN guidelines and study recommendations including chlorthalidone 12.5-25 mg/day or amlodipine 5-10 mg/day or as chosen by their doctor.
Case Western Reserve University
Cleveland, Ohio, United States
RECRUITINGBlood Pressure Control
Systolic BP \< 130 mmHg or Diastolic BP \< 80 mmHg, represents improved blood pressure control, measured digitally using a standard automatic BP device (Omron HEM-907 XL).
Time frame: Baseline - 6 months
Health Related Quality of Life (HRQOL)
Assess HRQOL using PROMIS Global Health-10. (Raw score range from 4-20, higher score represents better health
Time frame: Baseline - 6 months
Controlled BP (<130/80 mmHg)
Assess the Change in systolic BP/diastolic BP. Goal of 62% of Study sample with SBP \<130 mmHg. Systolic BP \<130 mmHg represents better BP control
Time frame: Baseline - 6 months
Biological risk markers
Measured serum cholesterol (mg/dL); high-density lipoprotein (mg/dL); low density lipoprotein (mg/dL) and cholesterol (mg/dL)
Time frame: Baseline - 6 months
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