Engagement in mHealth-Prompted Self-Measured Blood Pressure Monitoring Among Participants Recruited From a Safety-Net Emergency Department: Secondary Analysis of the Reach Out Trial
Lesli E Skolarus, Chun Chieh Lin, Sonali Mishra, William Meurer, Mackenzie Dinh, Candace Whitfield, Ran Bi, Devin Brown, Rockefeller Oteng, Lorraine R Buis, Kelley Kidwell

TL;DR
This study examines how often people use a mobile health app to track blood pressure in a low-income population and finds that higher engagement leads to better blood pressure control.
Contribution
The study identifies factors influencing engagement with blood pressure monitoring via text messaging and shows that higher engagement correlates with greater blood pressure reduction.
Findings
Participants receiving weekly prompts had higher engagement rates compared to those receiving daily prompts.
High engagement was associated with a greater decline in systolic blood pressure at 12 months.
Older age, higher education, and having a primary care doctor were linked to higher engagement.
Abstract
Hypertension, a key modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease, is more prevalent among Black and low-income individuals. To address this health disparity, leveraging safety-net emergency departments for scalable mobile health (mHealth) interventions, specifically using text messaging for self-measured blood pressure (SMBP) monitoring, presents a promising strategy. This study investigates patterns of engagement, associated factors, and the impact of engagement on lowering blood pressure (BP) in an underserved population. We aimed to identify patterns of engagement with prompted SMBP monitoring with feedback, factors associated with engagement, and the association of engagement with lowered BP. This is a secondary analysis of data from Reach Out, an mHealth, factorial trial among 488 hypertensive patients recruited from a safety-net emergency department in Flint, Michigan.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood Pressure and Hypertension Studies · Mobile Health and mHealth Applications · Medication Adherence and Compliance
