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Structured Lifestyle Modification Interventions Involving Frontline Health Workers for Population‐Level Blood Pressure Reduction: Results of a Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial in India (DISHA Study)

Authors :
Dimple Kondal
Panniyammakal Jeemon
Sathyaprakash Manimunda
Gitanjali Narayanan
Anil Jacob Purty
Prakash Chand Negi
Sulaiman Sadruddin Ladhani
Jyoti Sanghvi
Kuldeep Singh
Ajit Deshpande
Nidhi Sobti
Gurudayal Singh Toteja
Dorairaj Prabhakaran
Kashvi Kahol
Mumtaz Ali
Supriya Dwivedi
Zian Gonmei
Priyanka Gupta Bansal
Subodh Banzal
Susmit Kosta
Urvi Waghela
Dinesh Dalal
Late Narayan Suryawanshi
Garima Singh
Dleep Alawa
Kamlesh Patidar
Shankar Lal Maru
Shailendra Singh Mandloi
Varun Mandoliya
Rahul Chouhan
Laxman Singh
Harshada Bhalerao
Kranti Laxman Rayamane
Maitreyee Patwardhan
Himanshu Narendrabhai Bhatt
Yogesh Ratilal Dave
Nitaben Bharat Koriya
Ramila Lakha Sondarava
Rekhaben Vinod Thakar
Sabnam Jariya
Anjana Bhatt
Asmita Subhashbhai Vadsariya
Asheesh Shasuddin Kachi
Reena Yadav
Mehul Kariya
Hansaben Patel
Sanjay Patel
Trupti Sachin Lalya
Prabhakaran Stalin
Ramesh Chauhan
Z Singh
Yogesh Sharma
Mark Christopher
Maghida Sridhar
Sangeeta Narayanasamy
Prasanna Sundara Raju
Mehru Sudha
Radhika Devi
Shanmuga Sundari
Vanitha Arulsamy
Chinniah Devadas
Allimuthu Nasudan
Raja Rajeswaran
Manglaraj Rajasekar
Mohan Venkatesh
Jeyalakshmi Sreenivasan
Baby Rama Balakrishnan
Bakkiyalakshmi Ranganatha
Anjali Mahajan
Rajeev Merwaha
Virendra Mohan Singh Jaiswal
Sucheta Sharma
Raminder Dhiman
Ravinder Kumar
Reeta Sharma
Ravindra Thakur
Ashu Kanwar
Rama Kumari
Pratibha Sharma
Kiran Sharma
Saurabh Thakur
Source :
Journal of the American Heart Association. 11
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

Background Population‐wide reduction in mean blood pressure is proposed as a key strategy for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease. We evaluated the effectiveness of a task‐sharing strategy involving frontline health workers in the primary prevention of elevated blood pressure. Methods and Results We conducted DISHA (Diet and lifestyle Interventions for Hypertension Risk reduction through Anganwadi Workers and Accredited Social Health Activists) study, a cluster randomized controlled trial involving 12 villages each from 4 states in India. Frontline health workers delivered a custom‐made and structured lifestyle modification intervention in the selected villages. A baseline survey was conducted in 23 and 24 clusters in the control (n=6663) and intervention (n=7150) groups, respectively. The baseline characteristics were similar between control and intervention clusters. In total 5616 participants from 23 clusters in the control area and 5699 participants from 24 clusters in the intervention area participated in a repeat cross‐sectional survey conducted immediately after the intervention phase of 18‐months. The mean (SD) systolic blood pressure increased from 125.7 (18.1) mm Hg to 126.1 (16.8) mm Hg in the control clusters, and it increased from 124.4 (17.8) mm Hg to 126.7 (17.5) mm Hg in the intervention clusters. The population average adjusted mean difference in difference in systolic blood pressure was 1.75 mm Hg (95% CI, −0.21 to 3.70). Conclusions Task‐sharing interventions involving minimally trained nonphysician health workers are not effective in reducing population average blood pressure in India. Expanding the scope of task sharing and intensive training of health workers such as nurses, nutritionists, or health counselors in management of cardiovascular risk at the population level may be more effective in primary prevention of cardiovascular disease. Registration URL: https://www.ctri.nic.in ; Unique identifier: CTRI/2013/10/004049.

Details

ISSN :
20479980
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Heart Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....47cbb0e6758e5a7727b8bdc872644b6f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/jaha.121.023526