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. 2011 Jan;21(1):15-25.
doi: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2010.06.002. Epub 2010 Aug 21.

Trends in hypertension prevalence, awareness, treatment and control in older Mexican Americans, 1993-2005

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Trends in hypertension prevalence, awareness, treatment and control in older Mexican Americans, 1993-2005

Majd AlGhatrif et al. Ann Epidemiol. 2011 Jan.

Erratum in

  • Ann Epidemiol. 2012 Apr;22(4):302. Al Ghatrif, Majd [corrected to AlGhatrif, Majd]

Abstract

Purpose: To describe trends in hypertension prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control among older Mexican Americans living in the Southwestern United States from 1993-1994 to 2004-2005.

Methods: This study is a comparison between two separate cross-sectional cohorts of non-institutionalized Mexican Americans 75 years of age or older from the Hispanic Established Population for the Epidemiological Study of the Elderly (919 subjects from the 1993-1994 cohort and 738 from the 2004-2005 cohort). Data were collected on self-reported hypertension, measured blood pressure, medications, as well as sociodemographic and other health-related factors.

Results: Hypertension prevalence increased from 73.0% in the period 1993-1994 to 78.4% in 2004-2005. Cross-cohort multivariate analyses showed that the higher odds of hypertension in the 2004-2005 cohort was attenuated by adding diabetes and obesity to the model. There was a significant increase in hypertension awareness among hypertensives (63.0% to 82.6%) and in control among treated hypertensives (42.5% to 55.4%). Cross-cohort multivariate analyses showed that the higher odds of control in 2004-2005 cohorts were accentuated by adding diabetes to the model. There were no significant changes in treatment rates (62.2% to 65.6%)

Conclusion: Hypertension prevalence in very old Mexican Americans residing in the Southwestern United States was higher in 2004-2005 than in 1993-1994 and was accompanied by a significant increase in awareness and control rates.

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Conflict of interest statement

All authors have no conflict of interest related to this manuscript.

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