# A Low-Cost Educational Intervention for Rural Hypertension Control: Lessons for National Scale-Up

**Authors:** Anubhav Mondal, Richa Kapoor

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.85239 · 2025-06-02

## TL;DR

A low-cost educational program in rural India significantly improved blood pressure control and healthy habits among hypertensive patients.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates a scalable, low-cost intervention for hypertension management in rural settings.

## Key findings

- Blood pressure control improved from 14.7% to 52.9% after the intervention.
- Participants showed better medication adherence, physical activity, and dietary practices.
- Those with normal or reduced BMI had better outcomes, highlighting the role of lifestyle factors.

## Abstract

Hypertension poses a major public health challenge in rural India, exacerbated by limited awareness and healthcare access. This quasi-experimental study among 110 hypertensive patients at a rural health center in Delhi assessed the impact of a low-cost, multifaceted educational intervention comprising flipchart-based counselling, voice calls, and Short Message Service (SMS) reminders. The intervention significantly improved blood pressure control (from 14.7% to 52.9%), medication adherence, physical activity, and dietary practices. Improvements were statistically significant, and participants with normal or reduced body mass index (BMI) showed better outcomes. The approach was simple and scalable and aligned with the National Programme for Prevention and Control of Non-Communicable Diseases goals. Persistent gaps in routine screenings and lifestyle adherence suggest a need for qualitative research and enhanced follow-up mechanisms.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Non-Communicable Diseases (MESH:D000073296), Hypertension (MESH:D006973)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12168704