Effectiveness of multidisciplinary lifestyle intervention for hypertension: a randomised controlled trial

被引:0
|
作者
R Mattila
A Malmivaara
M Kastarinen
S-L Kivelä
A Nissinen
机构
[1] Rehabilitation Centre Korpilampi,Department of Public Health and General Practice
[2] University of Kuopio,Department of General Practice
[3] Finnish Institute of Occupational Health,Department of Epidemiology and Health Promotion
[4] University of Turku,undefined
[5] Turku,undefined
[6] Finland and Härkätie Health Center,undefined
[7] National Public Health Institute,undefined
来源
关键词
blood pressure; occupational health care; nonpharmacological treatment; employee; rehabilitation centre;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Lifestyle factors like weight, alcohol consumption, salt intake and physical activity have shown to be important in treating hypertension. There have been made some randomised trials about the effects of lifestyle interventions, but the numbers of patients have been relatively small and the durations of follow-ups have been short. No controlled trials assessing the effects of lifestyle intervention in a rehabilitation setting have been reported. In this study, the effects of multidisciplinary lifestyle intervention in rehabilitation centres among middle-aged hypertensive employees were described. A total of 731 hypertensives from 45 worksites were randomised to lifestyle intervention in a rehabilitation centre or to usual care in an occupational or primary health-care centre for 12 months. Standard measurements were conducted before the intervention and 1-year later. Blood pressure (BP) levels were clearly reduced in the intervention group, while only minor changes were observed in the control group. The net changes between the two groups both for systolic and diastolic BPs were −2.1 mmHg (95% confidence intervals (CI) −4.0 to −0.1) and −1.5 mmHg (95% CI −2.6 to −0.4), respectively. The net changes were greater among men than women. The multidisciplinary lifestyle intervention in a rehabilitation centre setting produced significant reductions in BP among middle-aged employees with hypertension.
引用
收藏
页码:199 / 205
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Is there a different effect of lifestyle intervention in subgroups of infertile obese women? Prespecified subgroup analyses of the LIFEstyle randomised controlled trial
    van Oers, A.
    Groen, H.
    Mutsaerts, M.
    Burggraaff, J.
    Kuchenbecker, W.
    Perquin, D.
    Koks, C.
    van Golde, R.
    Kaaijk, E.
    Schierbeek, J.
    Verberg, M.
    Broekmans, F.
    Mol, B. W.
    Land, J.
    Hoek, A.
    HUMAN REPRODUCTION, 2016, 31 : 29 - 29
  • [32] A cluster randomised controlled trial to investigate the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of the ‘Girls Active’ intervention: a study protocol
    C L Edwardson
    D M Harrington
    T Yates
    D H Bodicoat
    K Khunti
    T Gorely
    L B Sherar
    R T Edwards
    C Wright
    K Harrington
    M J Davies
    BMC Public Health, 15
  • [33] A cluster randomised controlled trial to investigate the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of the 'Girls Active' intervention: a study protocol
    Edwardson, C. L.
    Harrington, D. M.
    Yates, T.
    Bodicoat, D. H.
    Khunti, K.
    Gorely, T.
    Sherar, L. B.
    Edwards, R. T.
    Wright, C.
    Harrington, K.
    Davies, M. J.
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2015, 15
  • [34] Effectiveness of medication self-management, self-monitoring and a lifestyle intervention on hypertension in poorly controlled patients: The MEDICHY randomized trial
    Villafuerte, Fabian Unda
    Canaves, Joan Llobera
    Mantolan, Andreu Estela
    Flores, Patricia Bassante
    Carratala, Fernando Rigo
    Hernandez, Ana Requena
    Oliver, Bartolome Oliver
    Bordoy, Joan Pou
    Sancho, Maria Lucia Moreno
    Leiva, Alfonso
    Montalvo, Patricia Lorente
    FRONTIERS IN CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE, 2024, 11
  • [35] The effectiveness of a web 2.0 physical activity intervention in older adults – a randomised controlled trial
    Stephanie J. Alley
    Gregory S. Kolt
    Mitch J. Duncan
    Cristina M. Caperchione
    Trevor N. Savage
    Anthony J. Maeder
    Richard R. Rosenkranz
    Rhys Tague
    Anetta K. Van Itallie
    W. Kerry Mummery
    Corneel Vandelanotte
    International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, 15
  • [36] Effectiveness of psychoeducational intervention for rural Chinese families experiencing schizophrenia A randomised controlled trial
    Mao-Sheng Ran
    Meng-Ze Xiang
    Cecilia Lai-Wan Chan
    Julian Leff
    Peggy Simpson
    Ming-Sheng Huang
    You-He Shan
    Si-Gan Li
    Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 2003, 38 : 69 - 75
  • [37] One year effectiveness of an individualised smoking cessation intervention at the workplace:: a randomised controlled trial
    Rodríguez-Artalejo, F
    Urdinguio, PL
    Guallar-Castillón, P
    Dublang, PG
    Martínez, OS
    Azcárate, JID
    Alemán, MF
    Banegas, JR
    OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2003, 60 (05) : 358 - 363
  • [38] Effectiveness of an Intervention Programme on Adherence to the Mediterranean Diet in a Preschool Child: A Randomised Controlled Trial
    Cristina Martincrespo-Blanco, Maria
    Varillas-Delgado, David
    Blanco-Abril, Saray
    Gema Cid-Exposito, Maria
    Robledo-Martin, Juana
    NUTRIENTS, 2022, 14 (08)
  • [39] The effectiveness of a web 2.0 physical activity intervention in older adults - a randomised controlled trial
    Alley, Stephanie J.
    Kolt, Gregory S.
    Duncan, Mitch J.
    Caperchione, Cristina M.
    Savage, Trevor N.
    Maeder, Anthony J.
    Rosenkranz, Richard R.
    Tague, Rhys
    Van Itallie, Anetta K.
    Mummery, W. Kerry
    Vandelanotte, Corneel
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL NUTRITION AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, 2018, 15
  • [40] A cluster randomised controlled trial to investigate the effectiveness of a Structured Health Intervention for Truckers (SHIFT)
    Clemes, Stacy
    Varela-Mato, Veronica
    Chen, Yu-Ling
    Munir, Fehmidah
    Hamer, Mark
    Yates, Thomas
    Edwardson, Charlotte
    Gray, Laura
    Richardson, Gerry
    Troughton, Jacqui
    King, James
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY & HEALTH, 2018, 15 (10): : S60 - S60