Untreated hypertension: Prevalence and patient factors and beliefs associated with under-treatment in a population sample

S. L. Appleton*, C. Neo, C. L. Hill, K. A. Douglas, R. J. Adams

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    18 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Identifying barriers to hypertension management may facilitate cardiovascular risk reduction. Therefore, our objective, was to determine the prevalence of hypertension not managed with medication ('untreated') in a representative adult sample and identify patient factors/beliefs, and aspects of the patient-general practitioner (GP) relationship associated with untreated hypertension. The North West Adelaide Health Study, a biomedical cohort study over three stages from 2000-2009, assesses hypertension (systolic≥140 mm Hg and/or≥90 mm Hg or current treatment with anti-hypertensive medication), chronic disease and associated risk factors and health-care experiences, including risk perception, decision-making preferences, GP/primary care provider affiliation and satisfaction with care (n=2425). The prevalence of hypertension was 32.1% (n=781) comprised of treated (19.0%, n=462) and untreated (13.1%, n=319) hypertension. Thus, 40.8% of hypertension was untreated. Among hypertensive subjects, non-treatment was significantly associated with male sex, age <45 years, workforce participation, infrequent GP visits, dissatisfaction with recent medical care, high total cholesterol, moderate-level physical activity and lower body weights. Compared with participants without hypertension (and no treatment), untreated subjects demonstrated significant (15%) 10-year Framingham general cardiovascular risk (odds ratio=6.44, 95% confidence interval=4.52-9.17). Novel screening strategies and public health messages to address beliefs and perceptions of both patients and the health system are required to identify untreated, at-risk hypertensive individuals.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)453-462
    Number of pages10
    JournalJournal of Human Hypertension
    Volume27
    Issue number7
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jul 2013

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