ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION AMONG MEDICAL WORKERS. ANALYSIS. EVALUATION

О. Tolstanov, L. Gordienko
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Abstract

The aim. To examine the impact of individual medical and social factors, including work experience, lifestyle and living conditions, excess body weight, metabolic syndrome, types of circadian rhythms of blood pressure, and heredity, on the frequency of arterial hypertension (hypertensive disease - HD) formation. Materials and methods. The study involved the collection of anamnestic data, conducting interviews, performing objective examinations, and monitoring blood pressure in 391 medical workers, predominantly from therapeutic, surgical, and intensive care backgrounds. The obtained data were statistically processed using probability assessment criteria, risks assessed through odds ratio (OR), and ROC analysis. The results. The study revealed that only 33% of medical workers have a normal body weight. The risk of developing hypertensive disease (HD) is 3.24 times higher in the group with excess body weight and 8.72 times higher in the group with obesity compared to the examined subjects with normal body weight (p<0.0001). Daily blood pressure monitoring results showed a statistically significant difference in 12 out of the 21 studied parameters (p<0.05) between patients with HD, with and without metabolic syndrome. This indicates that the presence of metabolic syndrome affects the severity of hypertensive disease. Additionally, a statistically significant difference (p<0.05) was observed in the distribution of circadian rhythm types of blood pressure between groups with and without hypertension. It was established that there is a predominance of unfavorable types of circadian blood pressure rhythm in medical worker groups experiencing high professional psycho-emotional stress (78.1-85.5%). Recognizing the risk factors for HD occurrence in medical workers can significantly enhance the effectiveness of a comprehensive hypertensive disease prevention program, leading to reduced blood pressure levels and a lower frequency of complications. Conclusions. It has been established that excess body weight is a risk factor for the development of hypertensive disease (HD) in medical personnel. The presence of metabolic syndrome has been proven to affect the severity of the hypertensive disease course. There is a certain association between disruptions in circadian blood pressure rhythms, professional psycho-emotional stress, and the development of arterial hypertension in medical workers of certain specialties. The prognostically significant threshold level of work experience for the formation of a group at an increased risk of developing HD is 11 years.
医务工作者的动脉高血压。分析。评价
目标。研究个人医疗和社会因素,包括工作经验、生活方式和生活条件、超重、代谢综合征、血压昼夜节律类型和遗传,对动脉高血压(高血压病HD)形成频率的影响。材料和方法。这项研究涉及391名医务工作者的记忆数据收集、访谈、客观检查和血压监测,这些医务工作者主要来自治疗、外科和重症监护背景。使用概率评估标准、通过比值比(OR)评估的风险和ROC分析对获得的数据进行统计处理。结果。研究显示,只有33%的医务工作者体重正常。与正常体重的受试者相比,超重组和肥胖组患高血压疾病(HD)的风险分别高出3.24倍和8.72倍(p<0.0001),有或没有代谢综合征。这表明代谢综合征的存在会影响高血压疾病的严重程度。此外,在高血压组和非高血压组之间,血压昼夜节律类型的分布存在统计学显著差异(p<0.05)。研究表明,在经历高职业心理情绪压力的医务工作者群体中,血压昼夜节律的不利类型占主导地位(78.1-85.5%)。认识到医务工作者HD发生的危险因素可以显著提高综合性高血压疾病预防计划的有效性,从而导致血压水平降低和并发症的频率降低。结论。已经证实,超重是医务人员患高血压疾病(HD)的危险因素。代谢综合征的存在已被证明会影响高血压病程的严重程度。在某些专业的医务工作者中,昼夜血压节律的紊乱、职业心理情绪压力和动脉高血压的发展之间存在一定的联系。形成HD风险增加的群体的工作经验的预测显著阈值水平为11年。
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CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
审稿时长
12 weeks
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