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Effectiveness of a primary care-based integrated mobile health intervention for stroke management in rural China (SINEMA): A cluster-randomized controlled trial
by
Gong, Enying
, Gu, Wanbing
, Xu, Li-Qun
, Turner, Elizabeth L.
, Oldenburg, Brian
, Yan, Lijing L.
, Wang, Yilong
, Li, Zixiao
, McCormack, Kara E.
, Zhou, Yun
, Gallis, John A.
, Tang, Shenglan
, Bettger, Janet P.
in
Care and treatment
/ Clinical trials
/ Design
/ Exercise
/ Health care policy
/ Hospitals
/ Infectious diseases
/ Intervention
/ Maternal & child health
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Medicine, Rural
/ Methyltestosterone
/ Patient compliance
/ Patient outcomes
/ People and Places
/ Performance evaluation
/ Physicians
/ Population
/ Primary care
/ Primary health care
/ Public health
/ Smartphones
/ Stroke
/ Stroke (Disease)
/ Technology application
/ Telemedicine
2021
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Effectiveness of a primary care-based integrated mobile health intervention for stroke management in rural China (SINEMA): A cluster-randomized controlled trial
by
Gong, Enying
, Gu, Wanbing
, Xu, Li-Qun
, Turner, Elizabeth L.
, Oldenburg, Brian
, Yan, Lijing L.
, Wang, Yilong
, Li, Zixiao
, McCormack, Kara E.
, Zhou, Yun
, Gallis, John A.
, Tang, Shenglan
, Bettger, Janet P.
in
Care and treatment
/ Clinical trials
/ Design
/ Exercise
/ Health care policy
/ Hospitals
/ Infectious diseases
/ Intervention
/ Maternal & child health
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Medicine, Rural
/ Methyltestosterone
/ Patient compliance
/ Patient outcomes
/ People and Places
/ Performance evaluation
/ Physicians
/ Population
/ Primary care
/ Primary health care
/ Public health
/ Smartphones
/ Stroke
/ Stroke (Disease)
/ Technology application
/ Telemedicine
2021
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Effectiveness of a primary care-based integrated mobile health intervention for stroke management in rural China (SINEMA): A cluster-randomized controlled trial
by
Gong, Enying
, Gu, Wanbing
, Xu, Li-Qun
, Turner, Elizabeth L.
, Oldenburg, Brian
, Yan, Lijing L.
, Wang, Yilong
, Li, Zixiao
, McCormack, Kara E.
, Zhou, Yun
, Gallis, John A.
, Tang, Shenglan
, Bettger, Janet P.
in
Care and treatment
/ Clinical trials
/ Design
/ Exercise
/ Health care policy
/ Hospitals
/ Infectious diseases
/ Intervention
/ Maternal & child health
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Medicine, Rural
/ Methyltestosterone
/ Patient compliance
/ Patient outcomes
/ People and Places
/ Performance evaluation
/ Physicians
/ Population
/ Primary care
/ Primary health care
/ Public health
/ Smartphones
/ Stroke
/ Stroke (Disease)
/ Technology application
/ Telemedicine
2021
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Effectiveness of a primary care-based integrated mobile health intervention for stroke management in rural China (SINEMA): A cluster-randomized controlled trial
Journal Article
Effectiveness of a primary care-based integrated mobile health intervention for stroke management in rural China (SINEMA): A cluster-randomized controlled trial
2021
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Overview
Managing noncommunicable diseases through primary healthcare has been identified as the key strategy to achieve universal health coverage but is challenging in most low- and middle-income countries. Stroke is the leading cause of death and disability in rural China. This study aims to determine whether a primary care-based integrated mobile health intervention (SINEMA intervention) could improve stroke management in rural China.
Based on extensive barrier analyses, contextual research, and feasibility studies, we conducted a community-based, two-arm cluster-randomized controlled trial with blinded outcome assessment in Hebei Province, rural Northern China including 1,299 stroke patients (mean age: 65.7 [SD:8.2], 42.6% females, 71.2% received education below primary school) recruited from 50 villages between June 23 and July 21, 2017. Villages were randomly assigned (1:1) to either the intervention or control arm (usual care). In the intervention arm, village doctors who were government-sponsored primary healthcare providers received training, conducted monthly follow-up visits supported by an Android-based mobile application, and received performance-based payments. Participants received monthly doctor visits and automatically dispatched daily voice messages. The primary outcome was the 12-month change in systolic blood pressure (BP). Secondary outcomes were predefined, including diastolic BP, health-related quality of life, physical activity level, self-reported medication adherence (antiplatelet, statin, and antihypertensive), and performance in \"timed up and go\" test. Analyses were conducted in the intention-to-treat framework at the individual level with clusters and stratified design accounted for by following the prepublished statistical analysis plan. All villages completed the 12-month follow-up, and 611 (intervention) and 615 (control) patients were successfully followed (3.4% lost to follow-up among survivors). The program was implemented with high fidelity, and the annual program delivery cost per capita was US$24.3. There was a significant reduction in systolic BP in the intervention as compared with the control group with an adjusted mean difference: -2.8 mm Hg (95% CI -4.8, -0.9; p = 0.005). The intervention was significantly associated with improvements in 6 out of 7 secondary outcomes in diastolic BP reduction (p < 0.001), health-related quality of life (p = 0.008), physical activity level (p < 0.001), adherence in statin (p = 0.003) and antihypertensive medicines (p = 0.039), and performance in \"timed up and go\" test (p = 0.022). We observed reductions in all exploratory outcomes, including stroke recurrence (4.4% versus 9.3%; risk ratio [RR] = 0.46, 95% CI 0.32, 0.66; risk difference [RD] = 4.9 percentage points [pp]), hospitalization (4.4% versus 9.3%; RR = 0.45, 95% CI 0.32, 0.62; RD = 4.9 pp), disability (20.9% versus 30.2%; RR = 0.65, 95% CI 0.53, 0.79; RD = 9.3 pp), and death (1.8% versus 3.1%; RR = 0.52, 95% CI 0.28, 0.96; RD = 1.3 pp). Limitations include the relatively short study duration of only 1 year and the generalizability of our findings beyond the study setting.
In this study, a primary care-based mobile health intervention integrating provider-centered and patient-facing technology was effective in reducing BP and improving stroke secondary prevention in a resource-limited rural setting in China.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03185858.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
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