[Blood pressure control through awareness of hypertension among female in-home caregivers].
2011
OBJECTIVES: Our purpose was to clarify the situation regarding blood pressure control through awareness of hypertension among female groups of in-home caregivers and non-caregivers. METHODS: We used one existing data generated between December 2005 and April 2007. The subjects were females who were suffering from hypertension (66 caregivers were aged 49-84 years; 52 non-caregivers were aged 47-81 years). We defined persons suffering from hypertension on the basis of results of a self-administered questionnaire and blood pressure values. On the question of awareness of hypertension, we defined the persons who replied positively to any one of "I have hypertension," "I have suffered from hypertension," or "I take antihypertensive agents" as belonging to the "awareness group." We categorized the other respondents, who replied to all three questions in the negative as belonging to the "non-awareness group." We used blood pressure values, to build an index of the control with the chi2 test and the t-test for statistical comparisons. Values of P 0.05). Furthermore, values were significantly lower for the awareness than non-awareness group with respect to the non-caregivers (SBP: 135 +/- 15 mmHg vs 149 +/- 7 mmHg, DBP: 73 +/- 10 mmHg vs 78 +/- 6 mmHg). Caregivers who took the antihypertensive agent in the awareness group demonstrated high values exceeding SBP 140 mmHg, which was the hypertensive standard value, not different from the values for caregivers not taking such medication. (taking vs non-taking SBP: 148 +/- 21 mmHg vs 149 +/- 8 mmHg). CONCLUSION: Among the caregivers, it was not only the members of the non-awareness group but also those of the awareness group who were found to have high blood pressure values. Though the caregivers took antihypertensive agents, their blood pressure values remained high.
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