On-demand mobile hypertension training for primary health care workers in Nigeria: a pilot study

Only one out of every ten Nigerian adults with hypertension has their blood pressure controlled. Health worker training is essential to improve hypertension diagnosis and treatment. In-person training has limitations that mobile, on-demand training might address. This pilot study evaluated a self-pa...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC health services research 2024-04, Vol.24 (1), p.444-444, Article 444
Hauptverfasser: Odu, Joseph, Osi, Kufor, Nguyen, Leander, Goldstein, Allison, Appel, Lawrence J, Matsushita, Kunihiro, Ojji, Dike, Orji, Ikechukwu A, Alex-Okoh, Morenike, Odoh, Deborah, Toma, Malau Mangai, Elemuwa, Chris Ononiwu, Lamorde, Suleiman, Baraya, Hasana, Dewan, Mary T, Chijioke, Obagha, Moran, Andrew E, Agogo, Emmanuel, Thomas, Marshall P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Only one out of every ten Nigerian adults with hypertension has their blood pressure controlled. Health worker training is essential to improve hypertension diagnosis and treatment. In-person training has limitations that mobile, on-demand training might address. This pilot study evaluated a self-paced, case-based, mobile-optimized online training to diagnose and manage hypertension for Nigerian health workers. Twelve hypertension training modules were developed, based on World Health Organization and Nigerian guidelines. After review by local academic and government partners, the course was piloted by Nigerian health workers at government-owned primary health centers. Primary care physician, nurse, and community health worker participants completed the course on their own smartphones. Before and after the course, hypertension knowledge was evaluated with multiple-choice questions. Learners provided feedback by responding to questions on a Likert scale. Out of 748 users who sampled the course, 574 enrolled, of whom 431 (75%) completed the course. The average pre-test score of completers was 65.4%, which increased to 78.2% on the post-test (P 
ISSN:1472-6963
1472-6963
DOI:10.1186/s12913-024-10693-x