Post-Intervention Acceptability of a Multicomponent Intervention for Hypertension Management in Primary Care Clinics by Health Care Providers and Patients: A Qualitative Study of a Cluster RCT in Singapore

Abstract

Tazeen H Jafar,1– 3 Ngiap Chuan Tan,4 Rupesh M Shirore,1 Chandrika Ramakrishnan,1 Sungwon Yoon,1 Christina Chen,5 Amudha Aravindhan5 1Program in Health Services & Systems Research, Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore, Singapore; 2Department of Renal Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore, Singapore; 3Global Health, Duke Global Health Institute, Durham, NC, USA; 4Research, SingHealth Polyclinics, Singapore, Singapore; 5PhD Student, Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore, SingaporeCorrespondence: Tazeen H Jafar, Program in Health Services & Systems Research, Duke NUS Medical School, 8 College Road, Singapore, 169857, Singapore, Tel +65-6601-2582, Fax +65-6534-8632, Email [email protected]: Hypertension is a major public health challenge, globally. Recently, we reported findings from cluster randomized trial in 8 primary care clinics in Singapore and showed that a multicomponent “SingHypertension” intervention comprising 1) motivational conversation by trained nurses, 2) telephone-based follow-ups, 3) standardized algorithm with single-pill combination (SPC) antihypertensive medications, and 4) subsidy on SPC antihypertensive drugs was effective on improving BP control. This paper presents the acceptability of SingHypertension multicomponent intervention among the key stakeholders.Methods: We conducted post-implementation interviews of 38 stakeholders, including 18 patients and 20 healthcare providers (HCPs) in 4 primary care clinics randomized to the multicomponent “SingHypertension” intervention in Singapore. We used Theoretical Framework for Acceptability (TFA) framework with a focus on affective attitude, burden, ethicality, intervention coherence, opportunity cost, perceived effectiveness and self-efficacy to assess stakeholders’ acceptability of the intervention.Results: SingHypertension multicomponent intervention had high perceived effectiveness and a good fit with the value system and ethics of patients and HCPs. Physicians appreciated the guidance from standardized training in hypertension management. Although workload was increased, the nurses felt rewarded for their positive interactions with the patients during motivational conversation sessions and the telephone follow-ups. Most patients reported high self-efficacy levels, improved lifestyles, and adherence to antihypertensive medications. The limited choice of SPC medication, lack of subsidy beyond the trial duration, and shortage of nurses were significant challenges to wide-scale implementation. All HCPs and patients supported scaling up the intervention across primary care clinics.Conclusion: SingHypertension multicomponent intervention is acceptable to the key stakeholders in Singapore. Taken together with the effectiveness of the intervention, our findings make a compelling case for scaling-up SingHypertension in primary care clinics in Singapore and possibly other countries with similar healthcare infrastructure.Keywords: blood pressure, hypertension, cardiovascular risk, multicomponent intervention, cluster-randomized, acceptabilit

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