Charan Kamal Sekhon, Ramandeep Kaur, Monika Airi, Anurag Chaudhary
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Women's hypertension (HTN) is often underestimated and goes untreated due to the perception that women have a lesser risk of cardiovascular disease compared to males.
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence and major risk factors of HTN in adult women of Punjab.
Materials and methods: A community-based cross-sectional study with multistage sampling design was conducted among rural population of Punjab. The survey was designed in accordance with the WHO STEPwise approach for surveillance of noncommunicable disease to provide prevalence estimates of risk factors for three age groups for HTN. Village was considered a primary sampling unit (PSU). From each selected PSU in a rural area, households were selected. The ultimate sampling units were the households.
Results: A total of 2160 females were screened for HTN. Eight hundred and twenty-seven (38.27%) were found to be hypertensive, with 27.9% in stage 1 and 10.4% in stage 2 HTN. Body mass index and reproductive health factors (P = 0.001) were substantially linked with HTN. Significant disparities emerged in nutritional habits: hypertensive subjects exhibited higher average sugar intake (P = 0.006) and salt intake (P = 0.007) and were more likely to add table salt during meals (P = 0.013).
Conclusion: HTN prevalence is alarmingly high in Punjab, posing significant risks for chronic diseases and other health complications among its residents. The findings from this research could provide crucial insights that form the basis for developing tailored public health programs, policies, and awareness campaigns focused on HTN and its risk factors in rural communities.
期刊介绍:
Indian Journal of Public Health is a peer-reviewed international journal published Quarterly by the Indian Public Health Association. It is indexed / abstracted by the major international indexing systems like Index Medicus/MEDLINE, SCOPUS, PUBMED, etc. The journal allows free access (Open Access) to its contents and permits authors to self-archive final accepted version of the articles. The Indian Journal of Public Health publishes articles of authors from India and abroad with special emphasis on original research findings that are relevant for developing country perspectives including India. The journal considers publication of articles as original article, review article, special article, brief research article, CME / Education forum, commentary, letters to editor, case series reports, etc. The journal covers population based studies, impact assessment, monitoring and evaluation, systematic review, meta-analysis, clinic-social studies etc., related to any domain and discipline of public health, specially relevant to national priorities, including ethical and social issues. Articles aligned with national health issues and policy implications are prefered.