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. 2000 Feb;18(2):145-52.
doi: 10.1097/00004872-200018020-00003.

Hypertension prevalence and care in an urban and rural area of Tanzania

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Hypertension prevalence and care in an urban and rural area of Tanzania

R Edwards et al. J Hypertens. 2000 Feb.

Abstract

Objective: To describe the prevalence, detection, treatment and control of hypertension in an urban and rural area of Tanzania.

Design: Two linked cross-sectional population-based surveys.

Setting: A middle-income urban district of Dar es Salaam (Ilala) and a village in the relatively prosperous rural area of Kilimanjaro (Shari).

Participants: Seven hundred and seventy adults (> 15 years) in Ilala and 928 adults in Shari were studied.

Results: Hypertension prevalence (blood pressure > or = 140 and/or 90 mmHg, or known hypertensives receiving anti-hypertensive treatment) was 30% (95% confidence interval, 25.1-34.9%) in men and 28.6% (24.3-32.9%) in women in Ilala, and 32.2% (27.7-36.7%) in men and 31.5% (27.8-35.2%) in women in Shari. Age-standardized hypertension (to the New World Population) prevalence was 37.3% (32.2-42.5%) among men and 39.1% (34.2-44.0%) in women in Ilala, and 26.3% (22.4-30.4%) in men and 27.4% (24A-30.4%) in women in Shari. In both areas, just under 20% of hypertensive subjects were aware of their diagnosis, approximately 10% reported receiving treatment and less than 1% were controlled (blood pressure < 140/90 mmHg). Hypertensive subjects were older, had greater body mass indices and waist: hip ratios, and had more risk factors for hypertension and its complications (smoking, heavy alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, obesity and diabetes) than non-hypertensives.

Conclusions: There is a high prevalence of hypertension in rural and urban areas of Tanzania, with low levels of detection, treatment and control. This demonstrates the need for cost-effective strategies for primary prevention, detection and treatment of hypertension and the growing public health challenge of non-communicable diseases in Sub-Saharan Africa.

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