Community Health Workers Equipped with an mHealth Application Can Accurately Diagnose Hypertension in Rural Guatemala

Background: Hypertension is a leading global cause of morbidity and mortality and is increasing in low- and middle-income countries, where unawareness of hypertension is a primary obstacle to management. Community health workers (CHWs) in combination with mobile health (mHealth) tools are increasing...

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Main Authors: Sean Duffy, Taryn McGinn Valley, Alejandro Chavez, Valerie Aguilar, Juan Aguirre Villalobos, Kaitlin Tetreault, Guanhua Chen, Elizabeth White, Alvaro Bermudez-Cañete, Do Dang, Julie Cornfield, Yoselin Letona, Rafael Tun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2025-04-01
Series:Global Heart
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Online Access:https://account.globalheartjournal.com/index.php/up-j-gh/article/view/1423
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Summary:Background: Hypertension is a leading global cause of morbidity and mortality and is increasing in low- and middle-income countries, where unawareness of hypertension is a primary obstacle to management. Community health workers (CHWs) in combination with mobile health (mHealth) tools are increasingly used in LMIC health systems to strengthen primary care infrastructure. In this study, we applied this care model to hypertension in rural Guatemala by comparing the accuracy of CHWs equipped with an mHealth clinical decision support application in diagnosing hypertension to concurrent physician evaluation. Methods: We performed a prospective diagnostic accuracy study in which adults from rural Guatemalan communities were assessed independently by a CHW aided by a mHealth application and a physician. Assessment included medical history; measurement of blood pressure, height and weight; and determination of hypertension status. CHW-physician agreement on hypertension status and past medical history elements was assessed by Kappa analysis and proportional agreement, with a priori thresholds of Kappa = 0.61 and agreement of 90%. Agreement on patient measurements was evaluated using Bland-Altman and regression analyses. Results: Of 359 participants enrolled, 47 (13%) were confirmed to have hypertension and another 11 (3%) had possible hypertension. CHW-physician agreement was high for hypertension diagnosis, with Kappa = 0.8 (95% CI = 0.72, 0.88) and overall agreement 92.8% (95% CI = 90.1%, 95.4%). Bland-Altman analysis showed small biases toward lower systolic blood pressure, higher height, and lower BMI measurements by CHWs. Most patient history characteristics showed moderate to almost perfect (Kappa: 0.41–1) agreement between physicians and CHWs. Conclusions: In this study based in rural Guatemala, CHWs using a mHealth clinical decision support application were found to screen adult patients for hypertension with similar accuracy to a physician. This approach could be adapted to other low-resource settings to reduce the burden of undiagnosed and untreated hypertension.
ISSN:2211-8179