Authors |
Danaei
G, Finucane MM, Lin JK, Singh GM, Paciorek CJ, Cowan MJ, Farzadfar
F, Stevens GA, Lim SS, Riley LM, Ezzati M; Global Burden of Metabolic
Risk Factors of Chronic Diseases Collaborating Group (Blood Pressure).
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Abstract
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BACKGROUND: Data for trends in blood pressure are needed to understand
the effects of its dietary, lifestyle, and pharmacological determinants;
set intervention priorities; and evaluate national programmes.
However, few worldwide analyses of trends in blood pressure have
been done. We estimated worldwide trends in population mean systolic
blood pressure (SBP).
METHODS: We estimated trends and their uncertainties in mean SBP
for adults 25 years and older in 199 countries and territories.
We obtained data from published and unpublished health examination
surveys and epidemiological studies (786 country-years and 5·4
million participants). For each sex, we used a Bayesian hierarchical
model to estimate mean SBP by age, country, and year, accounting
for whether a study was nationally representative.
FINDINGS: In 2008, age-standardised mean SBP worldwide was 128·1
mm?Hg (95% uncertainty interval 126·7-129·4) in
men and 124·4 mm?Hg (123·0-125·9) in women.
Globally, between 1980 and 2008, SBP decreased by 0·8 mm?Hg
per decade (-0·4 to 2·2, posterior probability of
being a true decline=0·90) in men and 1·0 mm?Hg
per decade (-0·3 to 2·3, posterior probability=0·93)
in women. Female SBP decreased by 3·5 mm?Hg or more per
decade in western Europe and Australasia (posterior probabilities
=0·999). Male SBP fell most in high-income North America,
by 2·8 mm?Hg per decade (1·3-4·5, posterior
probability >0·999), followed by Australasia and western
Europe where it decreased by more than 2·0 mm?Hg per decade
(posterior probabilities >0·98). SBP rose in Oceania,
east Africa, and south and southeast Asia for both sexes, and
in west Africa for women, with the increases ranging 0·8-1·6
mm?Hg per decade in men (posterior probabilities 0·72-0·91)
and 1·0-2·7 mm?Hg per decade for women (posterior
probabilities 0·75-0·98). Female SBP was highest
in some east and west African countries, with means of 135 mm?Hg
or greater. Male SBP was highest in Baltic and east and west African
countries, where mean SBP reached 138 mm?Hg or more. Men and women
in western Europe had the highest SBP in high-income regions.
INTERPRETATION: On average, global population SBP decreased slightly
since 1980, but trends varied significantly across regions and
countries. SBP is currently highest in low-income and middle-income
countries. Effective population-based and personal interventions
should be targeted towards low-income and middle-income countries.
FUNDING: Funding Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and WHO.
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