Effect of digital health management on the management of essential hypertension patients with somatization symptom disorder in the community
10.3760/cma.j.cn114798-20250204-00072
- VernacularTitle:数字医疗管理对社区原发性高血压伴躯体化症状障碍患者管理效果的探讨
- Author:
Lingyan NI
1
;
Jialiang MAO
;
Ning QIN
;
Xia CHEN
;
Jing GONG
Author Information
1. 上海市虹口区江湾镇街道社区卫生服务中心,上海 200343
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Hypertension;
Somatization disorder;
Digital health management
- From:
Chinese Journal of General Practitioners
2025;24(4):434-440
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To explore the effectiveness of digital health management in the management of community patients with essential hypertension comorbid with somatization symptom disorder.Methods:This was an intervention-controlled study. Patients with essential hypertension comorbid with somatization symptom disorder who visited the outpatient clinic of Jiangwan Town Community Health Service Center in Hongkou District, Shanghai from January to December 2022 were enrolled. Based on the time of initial diagnosis, patients were divided into a digital health management group (initial diagnosis from January to June 2022) and a control group (initial diagnosis from July to December 2022). Baseline clinical data were collected. The control group received conventional interventions, while the digital health management group utilized the Health Cloud APP 5.3.11 platform for online digital health management without altering the original medication regimen. The intervention lasted for 24 weeks. Before and after the intervention, the Somatization Symptom Scale (SSS), 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), and 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-7) were used to assess somatization symptoms, depression, and anxiety, respectively. The reduction rate in SSS scores was calculated, and blood pressure and heart rate were measured. The evaluation criteria for somatization symptom intervention effectiveness were as follows: at the endpoint of the intervention, SSS ≤29 or a reduction rate of SSS ≥ 75% was considered "cured"; a reduction rate of 50% to <75% was considered "markedly effective"; a reduction rate of 25% to <50% was considered "effective"; and a reduction rate of <25% was considered "ineffective".The overall effectiveness rate=(number of cured patients + number of markedly effective patients + number of effective patients)/total number of patients × 100%.Results:A total of 62 patients in the digital health management group and 65 patients in the control group were included in the final analysis. The mean age of the digital health management group was (50.5±3.5) years, with 30 males (48.4%), while the mean age of the control group was (50.2±3.2) years, with 31 males (47.7%). There were no statistically significant differences in the age or gender distribution between the two groups (both P>0.05). Before the intervention, there were no significant differences between the two groups in SSS sub-item scores, total SSS scores, PHQ-9 scores, GAD-7 scores, blood pressure, or heart rate (all P>0.05). After 24 weeks of intervention, all scores decreased in both groups, and did blood pressure and heart rate (all P<0.05). The differences in SSS sub-item scores, total SSS scores, PHQ-9 scores, GAD-7 scores, blood pressure, and heart rate before and after the intervention were greater in the digital health management group than in the control group (all P<0.05). The proportion of patients with effective intervention for somatization symptom was higher in the digital health management group than in the control group (57 cases (91.9%) vs. 38 cases (58.5%), P<0.001). Conclusion:Digital health management can improve somatization symptom disorder, blood pressure, and heart rate in patients with hypertension.