Jing Wang, Chen-Xi Zhao, Jin Tian, Yan-Ru Li, Kai-Fang Ma, Rui Du, Meng-Kun Li, Rui Hu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Effective health management for high-risk stroke populations is essential. The hospital-community-home (HCH) collaborative health management (CHM) model leverages resources from hospitals, communities, and families. By integrating patient information across these three domains, it facilitates the delivery of tailored guidance, health risk assessments, and three-in-one health education.
Aim: To explore the effects of the HCH-CHM model on stroke risk reduction in high-risk populations.
Methods: In total, 110 high-risk stroke patients screened in the community from January 2019 to January 2023 were enrolled, with 52 patients in the control group receiving routine health education and 58 in the observation group receiving HCH-CHM model interventions based on routine health education. Stroke awareness scores, health behavior levels, medication adherence, blood pressure, serum biochemical markers (systolic/diastolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, and triglyceride), and psychological measures (self-rating anxiety/depression scale) were evaluated and compared between groups.
Results: The observation group showed statistically significant improvements in stroke awareness scores and health behavior levels compared to the control group (P < 0.05), with notable enhancements in lifestyle and dietary habits (P < 0.05) and reductions in postintervention systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, triglyceride, self-rating anxiety scale, and self-rating depression scale scores (P < 0.05).
Conclusion: The HCH-CHM model had a significant positive effect on high-risk stroke populations, effectively increasing disease awareness, improving health behavior and medication adherence, and appropriately ameliorating blood pressure, serum biochemical marker levels, and negative psychological symptoms.
期刊介绍:
The World Journal of Psychiatry (WJP) is a high-quality, peer reviewed, open-access journal. The primary task of WJP is to rapidly publish high-quality original articles, reviews, editorials, and case reports in the field of psychiatry. In order to promote productive academic communication, the peer review process for the WJP is transparent; to this end, all published manuscripts are accompanied by the anonymized reviewers’ comments as well as the authors’ responses. The primary aims of the WJP are to improve diagnostic, therapeutic and preventive modalities and the skills of clinicians and to guide clinical practice in psychiatry.