The PAM intervention is a behavioural intervention to support adherence to anti-hypertensive medications and therefore to lower blood pressure. This feasibility trial recruited 101 nonadherent patients (54% male, mean age 65.8 years) with hypertension and high blood pressure from nine general practices in the UK. The trial had 15.5% uptake and 7.9% attrition rate. Patients were randomly allocated to two groups: the intervention group (n = 61) received the PAM intervention as an adjunct to usual care; the control group (n = 40) received usual care only. At 3 months, biochemically validated medication adherence was improved by 20% (95% CI 3–36%) in the intervention than control, and systolic blood pressure was reduced by 9.16 mmHg (95% CI 5.69–12.64) in intervention than control. Improvements in medication adherence and reductions in blood pressure suggested potential intervention effectiveness. For a subsample of patients, improvements in medication adherence and reductions in full lipid profile (cholesterol 1.39 mmol/mol 95% CI 0.64–1.40) and in glycated haemoglobin (3.08 mmol/mol, 95% CI 0.42–5.73) favoured the intervention. A larger trial will obtain rigorous evidence about the potential clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the intervention. Trial registration Trial date of first registration 28/01/2019. ISRCTN74504989. https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN74504989 .
【저자키워드】 Medical research, Health care, Cardiology, Psychology, Health occupations, 【초록키워드】 Trial, feasibility, Intervention, hypertension, improvement, Haemoglobin, male, Patient, Effectiveness, clinical effectiveness, age, cholesterol, behavioural, medication, patients, attrition, Evidence, blood pressure, Support, Systolic blood pressure, control group, intervention group, 95% CI, usual care, Randomly, recruited, nine, biochemically, suggested, reductions in, was reduced, PAM, 【제목키워드】 randomised, feasibility, Intervention, hypertension, Controlled trial, Support,