Good results of mobile phone use to reduce NCD risk in rural China

4 June, 2025

BMJ: A village doctor-led mobile health intervention for cardiovascular risk reduction in rural China

A little bit of good research news concerning the use of village doctor-led mobile phone intervention on cardiovascular risk reduction in rural China. We will cover the use of mobile phones in the patient management of blood pressure at our workshop.

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A village doctor-led mobile health intervention for cardiovascular risk reduction in rural China: cluster randomised controlled trial | The BMJ

https://www.bmj.com/content/389/bmj-2024-082765

Objective: To assess the effectiveness of a village doctor-led mobile health intervention on cardiovascular risk reduction among residents in rural China.

Design: Cluster randomised controlled trial.

Setting: 127 villages from five provinces and autonomous regions in China.

Participants: 4533 participants from 127 villages: 2297 (64 villages) were randomly assigned to the intervention group and 2236 (63 villages) to the control group. Participants were aged ≥35 years, had no established atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) but a predicted 10 year risk of ≥10%, had contracted a family doctor service with the local village doctor, and owned a smart phone.

Interventions: In addition to usual clinical care and basic public health services provided for the control group, the intervention led by village doctors included five components: assessing risk factors to identify individualised intervention targets, setting gradual goals based on doctor-participant communication, providing targeted short videos on health education, conducting health monitoring with periodic feedback, and providing motivation to reduce risk based on gamification.

Main outcome measure: Mean change in predicted 10 year risk of ASCVD from baseline to 12 months.

Results: Enrolment took place between March 2023 and May 2023. During the 12 month follow-up (completion rate 99.4%), the 10 year risk of ASCVD decreased from 18.0% to 11.7% in the intervention group and from 17.8% to 13.6% in the control group (absolute difference −1.88% (95% confidence interval (CI) −2.57% to −1.19%; P<0.001). Compared with the control group, the intervention group showed larger reductions in lifetime ASCVD risk (−15.9% v −11.0%; difference −4.59%; P<0.001), systolic blood pressure (−23.2 mm Hg v −15.2 mm Hg; difference −7.64 mm Hg; P<0.001), diastolic blood pressure (−10.9 mm Hg v −6.9 mm Hg; difference: −3.59 mm Hg; P<0.001), fasting blood glucose (−0.9 mmol/L v −0.5 mmol/L; difference −0.30 mmol/L; P=0.008), proportion of daily smokers (−3.1% v −0.6%; odds ratio 0.60, 95% CI 0.43 to 0.84; P=0.003), and insufficient physical activity (−3.0% v 1.3%; odds ratio 0.63, 0.42 to 0.95; P=0.03). No significant differences were observed for change in non-high density lipoprotein cholesterol or proportion of participants with obesity.

Conclusions: The village doctor-led mobile health intervention was effective at reducing cardiovascular risk and improving control of behavioural and metabolic risk factors. This feasible approach could be scaled up in rural China and other under-resourced settings to improve health management based on the local primary healthcare system.

HIFA profile: Richard Fitton is a retired family doctor - GP. Professional interests: Health literacy, patient partnership of trust and implementation of healthcare with professionals, family and public involvement in the prevention of modern lifestyle diseases, patients using access to professional records to overcome confidentiality barriers to care, patients as part of the policing of the use of their patient data Email address: richardpeterfitton7 AT gmail.com