Tailoring Chronic Disease Interventions to Meet Specific Needs of Women: A Case Example of a Hypertension Program.

IF 1.8 Q3 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Women's health reports (New Rochelle, N.Y.) Pub Date : 2025-03-07 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1089/whr.2024.0139
Caroline A Dancu, Julie Schexnayder, Hayden B Bosworth, Allison Lewinski, Abigail Shapiro, Tiera Lanford, Courtney White Clark, Bevanne Bean-Mayberry, Leah L Zullig, Jennifer M Gierisch, Karen M Goldstein
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Abstract

Background: Women have a unique risk profile for cardiovascular disease (CVD) due to underlying sociocultural and biological determinants. Current CVD prevention and treatment interventions, however, largely remain agnostic to the influences of an individual's sex assigned at birth or gender identity. This study describes a process for tailoring existing evidence-based interventions to the biological and sociocultural determinants of health for women.

Methods: This study adapted the Team-supported, Electronic Health Record (EHR)-leveraged, Active Management (TEAM) CVD preventative care intervention designed for telehealth-based remote hypertension (HTN) care in rural Veterans. Tailoring choices were informed by a 12-month process including a focused literature review, qualitative interviews with women's health experts, and feedback from providers and women Veterans on existing intervention materials.

Results: Literature review and qualitative interview findings informed the modification of patient- and provider-facing TEAM materials. Patient-facing material modifications included the addition of information relevant to sex-specific CVD risk factors, addressing gender-related barriers to CVD risk reduction, and including diverse visual representation and inclusive language. Provider-facing materials were modified through a new EHR template to comprehensively address sex-specific CVD risk factors. These changes resulted in individualized care plans to better address gaps in HTN management among women.

Conclusion: Tailoring existing evidence-based interventions is an achievable and practical strategy to incorporate the sociocultural and biological determinants of CVD health specific to women. This approach could be used to adapt other programs and interventions designed to address health conditions that occur among both men and women but which are sensitive to important biological and sociocultural determinants. These findings highlight the broad discourse on sex- and gender-sensitive health care interventions and advocate for the integration of these interventions into routine clinical practice.

调整慢性病干预措施以满足妇女的特殊需求:高血压项目的一个案例。
背景:由于潜在的社会文化和生物学决定因素,女性患心血管疾病(CVD)具有独特的风险概况。然而,目前的心血管疾病预防和治疗干预措施在很大程度上仍然不受个人出生时的生理性别或性别认同的影响。这项研究描述了一个将现有循证干预措施与妇女健康的生物学和社会文化决定因素相适应的过程。方法:本研究采用团队支持、电子健康记录(EHR)辅助、主动管理(TEAM)心血管疾病预防保健干预,设计用于农村退伍军人远程高血压(HTN)护理。通过一个为期12个月的过程,包括重点文献审查、对妇女健康专家的定性访谈以及提供者和女退伍军人对现有干预材料的反馈,确定了量身定制的选择。结果:文献回顾和定性访谈结果为修改面向患者和提供者的团队材料提供了依据。面向患者的材料修改包括增加与性别特异性心血管疾病风险因素相关的信息,解决与性别相关的心血管疾病风险降低障碍,并包括多样化的视觉表现和包容性语言。通过新的EHR模板修改面向提供者的材料,以全面解决性别特异性心血管疾病风险因素。这些变化产生了个性化的护理计划,以更好地解决妇女HTN管理方面的差距。结论:调整现有的循证干预措施是一种可实现和实用的策略,可将女性心血管疾病健康的社会文化和生物学决定因素纳入其中。这一方法可用于调整其他方案和干预措施,旨在解决男性和女性都存在但对重要的生物和社会文化决定因素敏感的健康状况。这些发现强调了对性别和性别敏感的卫生保健干预措施的广泛讨论,并倡导将这些干预措施纳入常规临床实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
18 weeks
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