| Literature DB >> 28840040 |
Aiah Lebbie1, Richard Wadsworth1, Janette Saidu2, Camilla Bangura1.
Abstract
We report on the first survey of hypertension in undergraduates in Sierra Leone. Levels of hypertension (12%) and obesity (4%) appear low compared to the general population but given the rapid increase of both and the expectation that many graduates will enter the formal employment sector and a sedentary lifestyle, there is still cause for concern. We measured their BMI (body mass index) and used a questionnaire to investigate demographic and lifestyle choices. In agreement with most authorities, we found that BMI and age were statistically significant predictors of systolic and diastolic blood pressure but that the explanatory power was low (r = 0.21 to 0.27). Men may be more sensitive than women to an increase in BMI on blood pressure (p < 0.1). We failed to find statistically significant relationships with ethnicity, religion, stress, course of study, levels of physical activity, diet, smoking, or consumption of caffeine and alcohol. Family history of hypertension, consumption of red palm oil, and self-diagnosed attacks of typhoid fever were close to conventional levels of significance (p < 0.1). We intend to use this as a baseline for longitudinal studies to assess risks and suggest appropriate public health action.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28840040 PMCID: PMC5559978 DOI: 10.1155/2017/8196362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hypertens Impact factor: 2.420
Selected characteristics of the student population on Njala campus.
| Characteristic | Male | Female | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median or percentage | Quartiles | Median or percentage | Quartiles | |
| Number of respondents | 252 | 80 | ||
| Age (years) | 25 | 22 : 27 | 23 | 21 : 25 |
| Height (cm) | 172 | 167 : 176 | 161 | 155 : 165 |
| Weight (kg) | 62.5 | 58 : 69 | 61.0 | 53.0 : 70.3 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 21.3 | 20.0 : 23.3 | 23.4 | 21.1 : 26.7 |
| Obese (BMI > 30) | 2.0% | 4.0% | ||
| Number of siblings | 4 | 3 : 6 | 3 | 2 : 4 |
| Christian | 49.4% | 62.5% | ||
| Muslim | 50.6% | 37.5% | ||
| Married | 6.4% | 7.5% | ||
BMI: body mass index.
Potential risk factors for the student population on Njala campus (probabilities from single factor ANOVA or linear regression).
| Attribute | Number | Median BP-S (interquartile) | Significance | Median BP-D (interquartile) | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Sex | |||||
| Male | 250 | 122 (112 : 131) |
| 75 (67 : 82) | NS |
| Female | 80 | 112 (103 : 121) | 76 (68 : 82) | ||
| Age range | |||||
| Age < 25 years | 171 | 118 (108 : 130) |
| 72 (65 : 80) |
|
| Age ≥ 25 years | 159 | 121 (111 : 130) | 77 (70 : 83) | ||
|
| |||||
| BMI | |||||
| Obese (I & II) | 15 | 123 (118 : 137) | Regression | 84 (74 : 91) |
|
| Overweight | 46 | 124 (111 : 132) |
| 77 (70 : 84) | |
| Normal | 251 | 119 (109 : 128) | 73 (67 : 81) | ||
|
| |||||
| Married | 22 | 124 (115 : 130) | NS | 77 (72 : 87) | NS |
| Single | 305 | 120 (109 : 129) | 74 (67 : 82) | ( | |
|
| |||||
| Alcoholic intake | |||||
| Drink alcohol | 109 | 120 (111 : 129) | NS | 72 (66 : 80) | NS |
| No alcohol | 238 | 119 (109 : 130) | 76 (68 : 82) | ( | |
| Palm oil intake | |||||
| Palm oil > 4 d/w | 158 | 123 (110 : 131) | Regression | 75 (67 : 83) | NS |
| Palm oil 3-4 d/w | 153 | 118 (110 : 128) |
| 73 (67 : 81) | |
| Palm oil 1-2 d/w | 33 | 115 (108 : 128) | 76 (67 : 82) | ||
| Palm oil, never | 3 | 123 (122 : 129) | 87 (83 : 87) | ||
| Vegetable intake | |||||
| Fresh tomato | 83 | 120 (111 : 130) | NS | 79 (69 : 84) |
|
| No fresh tomato | 263 | 119 (109 : 129) | 73 (67 : 81) | ||
| Self-reported | |||||
| Typhoid | |||||
| Typhoid recently | 38 | 112 (102 : 122) |
| 69 (65 : 78) |
|
| No typhoid | 308 | 120 (110 : 130) | 76 (68 : 82) | ||
| Self-reported | |||||
| Malaria | |||||
| Malaria recently | 147 | 118 (109 : 129) | NS | 73 (66 : 81) | NS |
| No malaria | 199 | 120 (110 : 130) | 76 (68 : 83) | ( |
BP-S: systolic blood pressure; BP-D: diastolic blood pressure; NS: not significant; d/w = days per week.
Risk Factors with no conventionally statistically significant relations to blood pressure in our sample.
| Factor | Categories |
|---|---|
| Religion | Christian, Muslim, “prefer not to say” |
| Marital status | Married, single |
| Place of birth | Northern, southern, eastern province, western area |
| Place of birth | 14 districts |
| Ethnicity of mother, father | Fula, Koranko, Limba, Mandingo, Mende, Susu, Temne, others |
| Number of siblings | Only child, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, more than 9 |
| Birth order | 1 (first) through 9 (ninth) |
| Years to nearest sibling | Insufficient quality data for analysis |
| School of study | Agriculture, education, environment, health, natural resources, physics/technology, social sciences |
| Year of study | 1st, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th |
| Physical activity | Play sports (football, volleyball, running), do not play sports |
| Watch TV | More than 4 days/week, 3-4 days/week, 1-2 days/week, occasionally |
| Smoker | Yes, no |
| Drink alcohol | Yes (spirits, wine, beer, palm wine), no |
| High caffeine intake | Yes (energy drinks, caffeinated drinks, cola nuts), no |
| Favourite food | Cassava leaf, other leafy green vegetables, beans, “soup,” other |
| Food allergies and taboos | Cassava, pumpkin, lizard, pig, other |
| Fresh fruit consumption | More than 4 days/week, 3-4 days/week, 1-2 days/week, occasionally |
| Green vegetables | More than 4 days/week, 3-4 days/week, 1-2 days/week, occasionally |
| Number of meals per day | 1, 2, or 3 |
| Go to bed hungry | Sometimes, never |
| Go to bed bloated | Sometimes, never |
| General health | Very good, moderate, ok, poor |
| Malaria recently (3 months) | Yes, no |
| Stressed | Yes (money, relationships, exams, accommodation, water supply, noise), no |
| Number of hours of sleep | 4, 5, 6, 7, or 8 |
| Family deaths (last 2 years) | None, heart failure, high blood pressure, diabetes, other |
Figure 1Systolic blood pressure (BP-S) and BMI for men and women.
Figure 2Diastolic blood pressure (BP-D) and BMI for men and women.