Programme Grants for Applied Research

Digital interventions for hypertension and asthma to support patient self-management in primary care: the DIPSS research programme including two RCTs

  • Type:
    Extended Research Article Our publication formats
  • Headline:
    This research programme showed in two randomised controlled trials that digital interventions help to self-manage hypertension and have potential to support better control of asthma.
  • Authors:
    Detailed Author information

    Lucy Yardley1,2,*, Kate Morton1, Kate Greenwell1, Beth Stuart3, Cathy Rice4, Katherine Bradbury1, Ben Ainsworth1, Rebecca Band5, Elizabeth Murray6, Frances Mair7, Carl May8, Susan Michie9, Samantha Richards-Hall4, Peter Smith10, Anne Bruton5, James Raftery3, Shihua Zhu3, Mike Thomas3, Richard J McManus11, Paul Little3

    • 1 School of Psychology, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
    • 2 School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
    • 3 Primary Care, Population Sciences and Medical Education, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
    • 4 Patient and public involvement contributor, UK
    • 5 School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
    • 6 Primary Care and Population Health, University College London, London, UK
    • 7 General Practice and Primary Care, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
    • 8 Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
    • 9 Centre for Behaviour Change, Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, London, UK
    • 10 Department of Social Statistics and Demography, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
    • 11 Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
    • * Corresponding author email: lucy.yardley@bristol.ac.uk
    • Declared competing interests of authors: Lucy Yardley reports membership of the Health Technology Assessment (HTA) Antimicrobial Resistance Board (2013–14), HTA Efficient Study Designs Board (2015–16) and Public Health Research Funding Board (2015–17). Beth Stuart reports membership of the HTA Commissioning Committee (2020–4). Ben Ainsworth reports membership of the HTA Commissioning Committee (2020–1). Elizabeth Murray received grants from the Wellcome Trust India Alliance (Hyderabad, India), the National Health and Medical Research Council (Canberra, ACT, Australia), Alcohol Research UK (London, UK), Macmillan Cancer Support (London, UK) and the Medical Research Council (London, UK), during the conduct of the study. Frances Mair received personal fees from Janssen-Cilag Limited for activities outside the submitted work. James Raftery is an active member of the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) HTA Editorial Board and the NIHR Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation Editorial Board. Mike Thomas reports membership of the HTA PCCPI Panel (2015–18). Richard J McManus received blood pressure monitors for research purposes from OMRON (Milton Keynes, UK), grants from the Stroke Association (London, UK) and travel funding from the European Society of Hypertension, outside the submitted work. In addition, Richard J McManus reports membership of the HTA Clinical Evaluation and Trials Committee (2010–15). Paul Little was the director of NIHR Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and reports membership of the NIHR Journals Library Board (2012–18).

  • Funding:
    National Institute for Health and Care Research
  • Journal:
  • Issue:
    Volume: 10, Issue: 11
  • Published:
  • Citation:
    Yardley L, Morton K, Greenwell K, Stuart B, Rice C, Bradbury K, et al. Digital interventions for hypertension and asthma to support patient self-management in primary care: the DIPSS research programme including two RCTs. Programme Grants Appl Res 2022;10(11). https://doi.org/10.3310/BWFI7321
  • DOI:
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