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Virtual Expansion of the YMCA's Blood Pressure Self-Monitoring (BPSM) Program: Using Telehealth to Adapt an Evidence-Based Program to Reach Rural Communities in South Carolina

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Virtual Expansion of the YMCA's Blood Pressure Self-Monitoring (BPSM) Program: Using Telehealth to Adapt an Evidence-Based Program to Reach Rural Communities in South Carolina

J Public Health Manag Pract. 2024 Jul-Aug 01;30:S89-S95. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000001898. Epub 2024 Jun 12.

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Disparities in cardiovascular disease prevalence and death exist among South Carolina's rural residents. Blood pressure self-monitoring (BPSM), where individuals measure their own blood pressure outside of the clinical environment, coupled with additional support, is an evidence-based, cost-effective strategy that is underutilized at large.

PROGRAM: The YMCA's BPSM program is an evidence-based, 4-month program that includes 2 individualized office hours with a Healthy Heart Ambassador and 4 nutrition education sessions per month. Participants are provided with a blood pressure cuff and notebook to track their blood pressure at home in between sessions.

IMPLEMENTATION: The SC Department of Health and Environmental Control partnered with the SC Alliance of YMCAs to expand the YMCA's BPSM program virtually. The traditional program was adapted to allow for virtual participant encounters. To target rural communities, partnerships were leveraged or established with rural health centers, federally qualified health centers, free medical clinics, and other state health department regions for participant referrals into the program.

EVALUATION: A developmental evaluation design was utilized to monitor the virtual adaptation of the YMCA's BPSM program from April 2021 to May 2023. At the end of the project, 10 referral sources were identified to refer participants to the program. In total, 253 participants were referred to the program, 126 participants enrolled into the program, and 52 participants completed the program. Completers of the virtual program were successful in improving their blood pressure.

DISCUSSION: Successes of the virtual program were not without challenges. Lessons learned from the virtual expansion of this program included ensuring participants' readiness to engage in a 4-month program, assessing participants' digital literacy, and considering broadband access in rural areas. Improvements in blood pressure and the program's reach demonstrate merit in continuing to scale the virtual adaptation of this program; however, contextual and structural factors should be considered.

PMID:38870365 | DOI:10.1097/PHH.0000000000001898

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