Literature DB >> 8827151

Is hypertension more severe among U.S. blacks, or is severe hypertension more common?

R S Cooper1, Y Liao, C Rotimi.   

Abstract

It is frequently stated that the risk of sequelae from hypertension at a given level of severity is higher among blacks than whites, although little empirical evidence supports that supposition. In this work we examined the basis for accepting the existence of a black: white differential in hypertension outcomes in a representative biracial sample of the U.S. population followed in the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES-1) Epidemiologic Follow-up Study. As well recognized, the risk associated with increasing blood pressure is not dichotomous but varies across the entire distribution in a curvilinear fashion. The rightward skew of the blood pressure distribution with increasing mean levels affects comparisons between populations, since the change in shape results in a change in the mix of case severity. These considerations can influence estimates of the relative population-attributable risk from hypertension, considered as a dichotomous classification in blacks and whites. Although the relative risk of death associated with a systolic blood pressure of > or = 140 mmHg in this study was higher for blacks than for whites (1.7 and 1.5, respectively), with all-cause mortality as the outcome, the logistic coefficient for systolic blood pressure was not significantly different among white as compared with black men (beta = 0.016 vs. 0.010; p = 0.320 for race interaction term) and was slightly greater among white vs. black women (beta = 0.013 vs. 0.010; P = 0.05). After strata-specific blood pressure adjustment, the principal determinant of increased population risk for both black men and women was the higher prevalence of hypertension, not differential severity. The population-attributable risk for hypertension was at least two times higher among blacks because of the higher prevalence among them; moreover, the increased prevalence accounted for 10% of the interethnic difference in mortality. Data from this study indicate that hypertension was not more severe among individual blacks, simply more common in the population.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8827151     DOI: 10.1016/1047-2797(96)00009-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Epidemiol        ISSN: 1047-2797            Impact factor:   3.797


  24 in total

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2.  Life-course socioeconomic position and hypertension in African American men: the Pitt County Study.

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3.  Examining racial and ethnic disparities in health and hypertension control.

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4.  The prevalence of hypertension in seven populations of west African origin.

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5.  Blood pressure, prevalence of hypertension and hypertension related complications in Nigerian Africans: A review.

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6.  Cardiovascular risk in Gullah African Americans with high familial risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus: project SuGAR.

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7.  Variants in genes involved in functional pathways associated with hypertension in African Americans.

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9.  Knowledge, beliefs, and behaviors about hypertension control among middle-aged Korean Americans with hypertension.

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10.  Effects of parity on blood pressure among African-American women.

Authors:  Jacquelyn Y Taylor; Angelina N Chambers; Beth Funnell; Chun Yi Wu
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