Managing blood pressure at home |
Home monitoring an empowering process |
Home monitoring overcomes the problem of clinical inertia |
Home monitoring could save (or cost) time |
Patients may get obsessed with monitoring their blood pressure |
Home monitoring might be anxiety provoking |
Usual practice for managing high blood pressure |
Currently no system for recording home readings in practice |
Are home readings accurate? |
Home monitoring overcomes problems of white coat hypertension |
Useful that home readings are emailed to practitioners |
A system for responding to emails from HOME BP |
Agreeing medication changes in advance |
Understanding medication changes in advance may be empowering for patients |
Concerns about choosing medication changes in advance |
Potential solutions to problems with choosing medication changes in advance |
Does the baseline medication review need to be longer to allow explanation of medication changes? |
Supporting patients using HOME BP |
Useful that HOME BP provides support with behaviour change |
Supporters role with behaviour change viewed as important |
Supporter’s guide accessible |
Practitioners value building patient autonomy (avoiding dependence on practitioners) |
Perceptions of non-directive support using CARE |
Perceptions of congratulating patients using CARE |
Perceptions of reassuring patients using CARE |
Desire to see the patient intervention |
Lack of time to provide support |