The design of an observational study of hypertension management, adherence and pressure control in Blood Pressure Success Zone Program participants.

dc.contributor.author

Payne, KA

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Caro, JJ

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Daley, WL

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Khan, ZM

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Ishak, KJ

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Stark, K

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Purkayastha, D

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Flack, J

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Velázquez, E

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Nesbitt, S

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Morisky, D

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Califf, R

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BPSZ-BLISS Study Steering Committee

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England

dc.date.accessioned

2017-07-07T14:00:21Z

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2017-07-07T14:00:21Z

dc.date.issued

2008-09

dc.description.abstract

AIMS: The Blood Pressure Success Zone (BPSZ) Program, a nationwide initiative, provides education in addition to a complimentary trial of one of three antihypertensive medications. The BPSZ Longitudinal Observational Study of Success (BPSZ-BLISS) aims to evaluate blood pressure (BP) control, adherence, persistence and patient satisfaction in a representative subset of BPSZ Program participants. The BPSZ-BLISS study design is described here. METHODS: A total of 20,000 physicians were invited to participate in the study. Using a call centre supported Interactive Voice Response System (IVRS), physicians report BP and other data at enrolment and every usual care visit up to 12 +/- 2 months; subjects self-report BPs, persistence, adherence and treatment satisfaction at 3, 6 and 12 months post-BPSZ Program enrolment. In addition to BPSZ Program enrolment medications, physicians prescribe antihypertensive medications and schedule visits as per usual care. The General Electric Healthcare database will be used as an external reference. RESULTS: After 18 months, over 700 IRB approved physicians consented and enrolled 10,067 eligible subjects (48% male; mean age 56 years; 27% newly diagnosed); 97% of physicians and 78% of subjects successfully entered IVRS enrolment data. Automated IVRS validations have maintained data quality (< 5% error on key variables). Enrolment was closed 30 April 2007; study completion is scheduled for June 2008. CONCLUSIONS: The evaluation of large-scale health education programmes requires innovative methodologies and data management and quality control processes. The BPSZ-BLISS design can provide insights into the conceptualisation and planning of similar studies.

dc.identifier

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18647193

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IJCP1840

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1742-1241

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15030

dc.language

eng

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Hindawi Limited

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Int J Clin Pract

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10.1111/j.1742-1241.2008.01840.x

dc.subject

Adolescent

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Adult

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Aged

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Antihypertensive Agents

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Clinical Trials as Topic

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Female

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Humans

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Hypertension

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Male

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Middle Aged

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Patient Compliance

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Patient Education as Topic

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Patient Satisfaction

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Research Design

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Treatment Outcome

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Young Adult

dc.title

The design of an observational study of hypertension management, adherence and pressure control in Blood Pressure Success Zone Program participants.

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.author-url

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18647193

pubs.begin-page

1313

pubs.end-page

1321

pubs.issue

9

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Clinical Science Departments

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Duke

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Duke Clinical Research Institute

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Institutes and Centers

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Medicine

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Medicine, Cardiology

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School of Medicine

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

62

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