TY - JOUR
T1 - Effectiveness of a barber-based intervention for improving hypertension control in black men - The BARBER-1 study
T2 - A cluster randomized trial
AU - Victor, Ronald G.
AU - Ravenell, Joseph E.
AU - Freeman, Anne
AU - Leonard, David
AU - Bhat, Deepa G.
AU - Shafiq, Moiz
AU - Knowles, Patricia
AU - Storm, Joy S.
AU - Adhikari, Emily
AU - Bibbins-Domingo, Kirsten
AU - Coxson, Pamela G.
AU - Pletcher, Mark J.
AU - Hannan, Peter
AU - Haley, Robert W.
PY - 2011/2/28
Y1 - 2011/2/28
N2 - Background: Barbershop-based hypertension (HTN) outreach programs for black men are becoming increasingly common, but whether they are an effective approach for improving HTN control remains uncertain. Methods: To evaluate whether a continuous high blood pressure (BP) monitoring and referral program conducted by barbers motivates male patrons with elevated BP to pursue physician follow-up, leading to improved HTN control, a cluster randomized trial (BARBER-1) of HTN control was conducted among black male patrons of 17 black-owned barbershops in Dallas County, Texas (March 2006-December 2008). Participants underwent 10-week baseline BP screening, and then study sites were randomized to a comparison group that received standard BP pamphlets (8 shops, 77 hypertensive patrons per shop) or an intervention group in which barbers continually offered BP checks with haircuts and promoted physician follow-up with sex-specific peer-based health messaging (9 shops, 75 hypertensive patrons per shop). After 10 months, follow-up data were obtained. The primary outcome measure was change in HTN control rate for each barbershop. Results: The HTN control rate increased more in intervention barbershops than in comparison barbershops (absolute group difference, 8.8% [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.8%-16.9%]) (P=.04); the intervention effect persisted after adjustment for covariates (P=.03). A marginal intervention effect was found for systolic BP change (absolute group difference, -2.5 mm Hg [95% CI, -5.3 to 0.3 mm Hg]) (P=.08). Conclusions: The effect of BP screening on HTN control among black male barbershop patrons was improved when barbers were enabled to become health educators, monitor BP, and promote physician follow-up. Further research is warranted. Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00325533
AB - Background: Barbershop-based hypertension (HTN) outreach programs for black men are becoming increasingly common, but whether they are an effective approach for improving HTN control remains uncertain. Methods: To evaluate whether a continuous high blood pressure (BP) monitoring and referral program conducted by barbers motivates male patrons with elevated BP to pursue physician follow-up, leading to improved HTN control, a cluster randomized trial (BARBER-1) of HTN control was conducted among black male patrons of 17 black-owned barbershops in Dallas County, Texas (March 2006-December 2008). Participants underwent 10-week baseline BP screening, and then study sites were randomized to a comparison group that received standard BP pamphlets (8 shops, 77 hypertensive patrons per shop) or an intervention group in which barbers continually offered BP checks with haircuts and promoted physician follow-up with sex-specific peer-based health messaging (9 shops, 75 hypertensive patrons per shop). After 10 months, follow-up data were obtained. The primary outcome measure was change in HTN control rate for each barbershop. Results: The HTN control rate increased more in intervention barbershops than in comparison barbershops (absolute group difference, 8.8% [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.8%-16.9%]) (P=.04); the intervention effect persisted after adjustment for covariates (P=.03). A marginal intervention effect was found for systolic BP change (absolute group difference, -2.5 mm Hg [95% CI, -5.3 to 0.3 mm Hg]) (P=.08). Conclusions: The effect of BP screening on HTN control among black male barbershop patrons was improved when barbers were enabled to become health educators, monitor BP, and promote physician follow-up. Further research is warranted. Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00325533
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U2 - 10.1001/archinternmed.2010.390
DO - 10.1001/archinternmed.2010.390
M3 - Article
C2 - 20975012
AN - SCOPUS:79952222749
SN - 0003-9926
VL - 171
SP - 342
EP - 350
JO - Archives of Internal Medicine
JF - Archives of Internal Medicine
IS - 4
ER -