GET THE APP

..

Journal of Hypertension: Open Access

ISSN: 2167-1095

Open Access

Silent Crisis: Epidemic Hypertension in Rural West Africa

Abstract

Emmanuel Ato Williams, Daniel Ansong, Stephen Alder, Lowell Scott Benson, Stephen James Campbell, Katherine MacDonald, Tadashi R Miya, Isaac Boakye, Joseph Marfo Boaheng, Evans Xorse Amuzu, Osei Asibey Owusu, Isaac Nyanor, Bernard Arhin and Ty Triston Dickerson

Background: Hypertension is the commonest modifiable risk factor of cardiovascular diseases and a major preventable cause of premature mortality. The worldwide prevalence of hypertension will increase by more than half by 2025; almost three-quarters of people with hypertension will be living in developing countries by 2025. We set out to evaluate the burden and correlates of adult hypertension in a rural Ghanaian community.

Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted on 438 adults aged ≥35 in the Barekese sub-district (estimated population 18,510). Socio-demographic characteristics, modifiable and non-modifiable risk factors, blood pressure (BP) and anthropometric measurements were collected using standardized protocols.

Results: The proportion of hypertension and isolated systolic hypertension in the study population is 50.9% and 16.0% respectively. Only 21.2% were previously diagnosed as hypertensive; 25.8% of whom were not being treated. The proportion of the people with hypertension whose BPs were controlled (<140/90mmHg) was 13.5%. The mean systolic and diastolic BPs were 134.75 mmHg (SD: 24.68) and 83.01 mmHg (SD: 13.58). Obesity (Body Mass Index, BMI>30 kg/m2) was found in 13.24% of the population, with 6.7% being extremely obese (BMI>40 kg/m2). Factors such as increasing age and BMI positively correlated with BP.

Conclusion: There appears to be a high burden of hypertension in rural Ghana; the low detection, and poor management and control should make this a high priority. These findings indicate the need for urgent measures to promote health education that would facilitate prevention, early detection, and management of hypertension.

PDF

Share this article

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 614

Journal of Hypertension: Open Access received 614 citations as per Google Scholar report

Journal of Hypertension: Open Access peer review process verified at publons

Indexed In

 
arrow_upward arrow_upward