학술논문

Interindividual Variability in Self-Monitoring of Blood Pressure Using Consumer-Purchased Wireless Devices
Document Type
article
Source
Nursing Research. 72(4)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Health Sciences
Clinical Research
Cardiovascular
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Female
Blood Pressure
Prospective Studies
Blood Pressure Monitoring
Ambulatory
Longitudinal Studies
Hypertension
blood pressure
blood pressure monitoring
mobile health
self
Nursing
Midwifery
Language
Abstract
BackgroundEngagement with self-monitoring of blood pressure (BP) declines, on average, over time but may vary substantially by individual.ObjectivesWe aimed to describe different 1-year patterns (groups) of self-monitoring of BP behaviors, identify predictors of those groups, and examine the association of self-monitoring of BP groups with BP levels over time.MethodsWe analyzed device-recorded BP measurements collected by the Health eHeart Study-an ongoing prospective eCohort study-from participants with a wireless consumer-purchased device that transmitted date- and time-stamped BP data to the study through a full 12 months of observation starting from the first day they used the device. Participants received no instruction on device use. We applied clustering analysis to identify 1-year self-monitoring, of BP patterns.ResultsParticipants had a mean age of 52 years and were male and White. Using clustering algorithms, we found that a model with three groups fit the data well: persistent daily use (9.1% of participants), persistent weekly use (21.2%), and sporadic use only (69.7%). Persistent daily use was more common among older participants who had higher Week 1 self-monitoring of BP frequency and was associated with lower BP levels than the persistent weekly use or sporadic use groups throughout the year.ConclusionWe identified three distinct self-monitoring of BP groups, with nearly 10% sustaining a daily use pattern associated with lower BP levels.