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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Cardio

Date Submitted: May 11, 2017
Date Accepted: Aug 31, 2017
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

My Hypertension Education and Reaching Target (MyHEART): Development and Dissemination of a Patient-Centered Website for Young Adults with Hypertension

Johnson HM, LaMantia JN, Brown CM, Warner RC, Zeller LM, Haggart RC, Stonewall K, Lauver DR

My Hypertension Education and Reaching Target (MyHEART): Development and Dissemination of a Patient-Centered Website for Young Adults with Hypertension

JMIR Cardio 2017;1(2):e5

DOI: 10.2196/cardio.8025

PMID: 29664482

PMCID: 5898439

My Hypertension Education and Reaching Target (MyHEART): Development and Dissemination of a Patient-Centered Website for Young Adults with Hypertension

  • Heather M Johnson; 
  • Jamie N LaMantia; 
  • Colleen M Brown; 
  • Ryan C Warner; 
  • Laura M Zeller; 
  • Ryan C Haggart; 
  • Keven Stonewall; 
  • Diane R Lauver

ABSTRACT

Background:

Young adults (18 to 39 years old) with hypertension have the lowest rates of blood pressure control (defined as blood pressure less than 140/90 mmHg) compared to other adult age groups. Approximately 1 in 15 young adults have high blood pressure, increasing their risk of future heart attack, stroke, congestive heart failure, and/or chronic kidney disease. Many young adults reported having few resources to address their needs for health education on managing cardiovascular risk.

Objective:

The goal of our study was to develop and disseminate a website with evidence-based, clinical information and health behavior resources tailored to young adults with hypertension.

Methods:

In collaboration with young adults, health systems, and community stakeholders, the My Hypertension Education and Reaching Target (MyHEART) website was created. A toolkit was also developed for clinicians and healthcare systems to disseminate the website within their organizations. The dissemination plan was guided by the Dissemination Planning Tool of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).

Results:

Google Analytics data were acquired for January 1, 2017 to June 29, 2017. The MyHEART website received 1090 visits with 2130 page views; 18.99% (207/1090) were returning visitors. The majority (55.96%, 610/1090) approached the website through organic searches, 34.95% (381/1090) accessed the MyHEART website directly, and 5.96% (65/1090) approached through referrals from other sites. There was a spike in site visits around times of increased efforts to disseminate the website.

Conclusions:

The successfully implemented MyHEART website and toolkit reflect collaborative input from community and healthcare stakeholders to provide evidence-based, portable hypertension education to a hard-to-reach population. The MyHEART website and toolkit can support healthcare providers’ education and counseling with young adults and organizations’ hypertension population health goals.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Johnson HM, LaMantia JN, Brown CM, Warner RC, Zeller LM, Haggart RC, Stonewall K, Lauver DR

My Hypertension Education and Reaching Target (MyHEART): Development and Dissemination of a Patient-Centered Website for Young Adults with Hypertension

JMIR Cardio 2017;1(2):e5

DOI: 10.2196/cardio.8025

PMID: 29664482

PMCID: 5898439

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.