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Control of High Blood Pressure improving in
U.S., but prevalence not decreasing
Newswise, May 2010 — About 50 percent of
patients with hypertension have adequate
control of their blood pressure, meeting a
goal of Healthy People 2010, but the rate of
hypertension in the U.S. has not decreased
in recent years, according to a study in the
May 26 issue of JAMA.
“Hypertension is a prevalent condition
affecting approximately 65 million
individuals in the United States based on a
preliminary report from the National Health
and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES)
2005-2006 and coincident U.S. population
estimates.
"Given the prevalence and impact of hypertension
on health outcomes and disparities, several
national initiatives developed programs,
guidelines, and policies to facilitate
hypertension prevention,
detection/awareness, treatment, and
control,” according to background
information in the article.
"Hypertension
control (defined as systolic blood pressure
[BP] values of less than 140 mm Hg and
diastolic BP values of less than 90 mm Hg)
increased from 10 percent in NHANES II
(1976-1980) to 31 percent in 1999-2000. The
Healthy People 2010 goal was to achieve BP
control in 50 percent of the U.S.
population.
Brent M. Egan, M.D., of the Medical University
of South Carolina, Charleston, and
colleagues examined changes in hypertension
prevalence, awareness, treatment, and
control for all adults combined and for
subsets by age, race/ ethnicity, and sex
across NHANES 1988-1994 and 1999-2008 in
five 2-year blocks, which included 42,856
adults older than 18 years, representing a
sample of the U.S. population. Hypertension
was defined as systolic BP of at least 140
mm Hg and diastolic BP of at least 90 mm Hg,
self-reported use of antihypertensive
medications, or both.
The researchers found that the rates of
hypertension increased from 23.9 percent in
1988-1994 to 28.5 percent in 1999-2000, but
did not change between 1999-2000 and
2007-2008 (29.0 percent). “… prevalent
hypertension is not decreasing toward the
national goal of 16 percent and will likely
remain high unless adverse trends in
population nutrition and body mass index
occur or pharmacological approaches to
hypertension prevention are adopted,” they
write.
Hypertension control increased from 27.3
percent in 1988-1994 to 50.1 percent in
2007-2008, and BP among patients with
hypertension decreased from 143.0/80.4 mm Hg
to 135.2/74.1 mm Hg.
“Blood pressure control improved significantly
more in absolute percentages between
1999-2000 and 2007-2008 vs. 1988-1994 and
1999-2000. Better BP control reflected
improvements in awareness, treatment, and
proportion of patients who were treated and
had controlled hypertension. Hypertension
control improved significantly between
1988-1994 and 2007-2008, across age, race,
and sex groups, but was lower among
individuals aged 18 to 39 years vs. 40 to 59
years and 60 years or older, and in Hispanic
vs. white individuals,” the authors write.
“Hypertension control improved, despite
adverse changes in nutrition and body mass
index and reflects increases in awareness,
treatment, and patients who were treated
attaining target BP, in all individuals
with hypertension combined and all age,
race, and sex subgroups. However,
demographic disparities exist. Broad-based
efforts to improve awareness, treatment,
and proportion of patients treated and
controlled are important for increasing BP
control in all groups. Complementary
programs to raise awareness and treatment
among 18 to 39 years, Hispanic, and male
groups and to increase the proportion of
patients treated and controlled among 60
years or older, black, and female groups are
important for improving hypertension
control and reducing disparities,” the
researchers conclude.
Editorial: Improved Hypertension Control -
Cause for Some Celebration
In an accompanying editorial, Aram V. Chobanian,
M.D., of the Boston University Medical
Center, writes that although these findings
are encouraging, many challenges remain.
“More than 30 percent of the U.S. adult
population has hypertension and at least as
many have pre-hypertension, which is also
associated with increased risk of
cardiovascular diseases and which typically
progresses to hypertension
"As the population ages, hypertension prevalence
will increase further unless effective
measures are taken to diminish the
age-associated increase in BP. Although
lifestyle changes can reduce BP and the risk
of developing hypertension, successful
behavioral approaches to modify lifestyles
on a population basis have lagged far behind
the advances in the drug treatment of
hypertension.”
“In the long run, the far superior approach to
controlling hypertension and cardiovascular
diseases will be prevention rather than
treatment.”
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