FRIDAY, Jan. 27 (HealthDay News) -- Positive reinforcement, such as
receiving small, unexpected gifts and introducing upbeat thoughts into
daily routines, seems to help patients with high blood pressure take their
medication as directed, according to a new study of black Americans.
The findings are significant because poor blood pressure control can
lead to heart problems and death, the researchers from the Center for
Healthful Behavior Change at NYU School of Medicine noted in the report
published online Jan. 23 in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
For the study, Dr. Gbenga Ogedegbe and colleagues examined 256 black
patients with high blood pressure (also called hypertension) to determine
if positive reinforcement in addition to patient education would help them
follow their treatment plans and take their medication correctly.
The researchers divided the patients into two groups: those who only
received patient education; and those who received positive reinforcement
as well as patient education.
Both groups received educational materials, including a self-management
workbook, a behavioral contract and two phone calls each month.
However, patients who received additional positive reinforcement were
given an extra chapter in their workbook that discussed how positive
moments could be used to help them stick to their treatment plans.
In addition, during their semi-monthly phone calls, these patients
were asked to remember positive moments in their lives and use those
optimistic feelings to help them overcome any challenges that made it hard
to take their medicine. This group was also given token, unexpected gifts
in the mail before their phone calls.
The investigators found that medication adherence at one year was
higher in the positive reinforcement plus education group (42 percent)
than in the education-only group (36 percent).
"Our findings suggest that [patient education] enhanced with behavioral
constructs drawn from positive psychology and designed to foster
[self-affirmation] produced significantly greater medication adherence in
hypertensive African Americans than [patient education] alone," the
authors wrote in a journal news release.
The study authors noted that more research is needed to determine if
incorporating positive reinforcement into treatment for high blood
pressure would be cost-effective.
More information
The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about
hypertension .
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