Hypertension, volume 76, issue 2, pages 333-341

May Measurement Month 2019

Neil R. Poulter 1, 2
Aletta E Schutte 3, 4
George S. Stergiou 5
Claudio Borghi 6
Dylan Burger 7
Fadi Charchar 8
Suzie Cro 1
Alejandro Diaz 9
Albertino Damasceno 10
Walter Espeche 11
Arun Pulikkottil Jose 12
Nadia Khan 13
Yoshihiro Kokubo 14
Anuj Maheshwari 15
Marcos J. Marin 16
Arun More 17
Dinesh Neupane 18, 19
Peter Nilsson 20
Mansi Patil 21
Prabhakaran Dorairaj 10
Agustin Ramirez 22
Pablo Rodriguez 23
Markus Schlaich 24
Ulrike M Steckelings 25
Maciej Tomaszewski 26
Thomas Unger 27
Richard Wainford 28
JIGUANG WANG 29
Bryan Williams 30
Neil R. Poulter 1
Show full list: 30 authors
1
 
From the Imperial Clinical Trials Unit (T.B., S.C., N.R.P.)
11
 
Internal Medicine, Hospital San Martin de la Plata, Argentina (W.E.)
16
 
Hospital Italiano de San Justo, Departamento Clínica Médica, Sección Hipertensión Arterial, San Justo, Argentina (M.J.M.)
17
 
Institute of Hypertension, Rural Health Progress Trust, Maharashtra, India (A. More)
18
 
Nepal Development Society, Chitwan, Nepal (D.N.)
21
 
Indian Association of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, India (M.P.)
22
 
Hospital Universitario Fundación Favaloro, Buenos Aires, Argentina (A.R.)
23
 
Hypertension Clinic, Instituto Cardiovascular, Argentinian Society of Hypertension, Buenos Aires, Argentina (P.R.)
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2020-05-18
Journal: Hypertension
scimago Q1
SJR2.827
CiteScore15.9
Impact factor6.9
ISSN0194911X, 15244563, 23071095, 22241485
Internal Medicine
Abstract

Elevated blood pressure remains the single biggest risk factor contributing to the global burden of disease and mortality. May Measurement Month is an annual global screening campaign aiming to improve awareness of blood pressure at the individual and population level. Adults (≥18 years) recruited through opportunistic sampling were screened at sites in 92 countries during May 2019. Ideally, 3 blood pressure readings were measured for each participant, and data on lifestyle factors and comorbidities were collected. Hypertension was defined as a systolic blood pressure ≥140 mm Hg, or a diastolic blood pressure ≥90 mm Hg (mean of the second and third readings) or taking antihypertensive medication. When necessary, multiple imputation was used to estimate participants’ mean blood pressure. Mixed-effects models were used to evaluate associations between blood pressure and participant characteristics. Of 1 508 130 screenees 482 273 (32.0%) had never had a blood pressure measurement before and 513 337 (34.0%) had hypertension, of whom 58.7% were aware, and 54.7% were on antihypertensive medication. Of those on medication, 57.8% were controlled to <140/90 mm Hg, and 28.9% to <130/80 mm Hg. Of all those with hypertension, 31.7% were controlled to <140/90 mm Hg, and 350 825 (23.3%) participants had untreated or inadequately treated hypertension. Of those taking antihypertensive medication, half were taking only a single drug, and 25% reported using aspirin inappropriately. This survey is the largest ever synchronized and standardized contemporary compilation of global blood pressure data. This campaign is needed as a temporary substitute for systematic blood pressure screening in many countries worldwide.

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