UW and Crook County Public Library System Offer Blood Pressure Cuffs for Checkout

three people posing with red and black plastic boxes
From left, Bonnie Stahla, director of the Crook County Public Library System; Carrie Riley, library branch manager in Sundance; and Dian True, a senior project coordinator with WyCOA at UW, display blood pressure monitoring kits. The kits are now available at libraries in Hulett, Moorcroft and Sundance. The public can check out the kits for a period up to two weeks. (Dian True Photo)

Self-measured blood pressure monitoring kits are now available for checkout at libraries in Hulett, Moorcroft and Sundance. The kits are offered through a collaborative pilot project among the Wyoming Center on Aging (WyCOA) at the University of Wyoming, the Wyoming Department of Health’s Chronic Disease Prevention Program and the Crook County Public Library System.

The kits, available in both English and Spanish, include an automated home blood pressure cuff; blood pressure logbooks; educational materials from the American Heart Association; information on what blood pressure is; and ideas for healthy lifestyle changes. The kits also include a resource directory to local community-based organizations and referral resources to the Healthy U chronic disease self-management program.

The loan period is two weeks. Blood pressure kits will be automatically renewed, up to two times, if there are no holds on the item. This program also is currently available to people in Albany, Carbon, Laramie, Lincoln, Natrona, Park, Sheridan, Sublette, Sweetwater and Washakie counties, with plans to be in all 23 counties by the end of June.

Nearly half of adults in the United States -- 47 percent, or 116 million -- have high blood pressure, also known as hypertension, or are taking medication for hypertension, and 24 percent with hypertension have their condition under control, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In Wyoming, 30.7 percent of adults have been told that they have high blood pressure, according to the Wyoming Department of Health’s Chronic Disease Prevention Program.

While self-measurement of blood pressure is not a substitute for regular visits to primary care physicians, it is a way for individuals to see and track their numbers, giving them more information that can be communicated to their doctors.

“Information is power and, the more information a patient and their doctor have, the better the treatment plan. That is why people need to know their numbers,” says Dian True, a senior project coordinator with WyCOA. “Better treatment plans lead to better overall health. That’s the goal of this project -- to work to improve the health of our communities.”

The Crook County Public Library System is committed to building and supporting strong, healthy communities. This project provides a unique opportunity to offer the community more information about self-monitored blood pressure and its important role in health.

“We are excited to partner with the Wyoming Department of Health and WyCOA to bring these much-needed resources to the community,” says Bonnie Stahla, director of the Crook County Public Library System.

To learn more about the Crook County Public Library System, go to www.crookcountylibrary.org/.

To learn more about WyCOA and its programs, go to www.uwyo.edu/wycoa/.

Contact Us

Institutional Communications
Bureau of Mines Building, Room 137
Laramie, WY 82071
Phone: (307) 766-2929
Email: cbaldwin@uwyo.edu


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