Expectra Health Solutions, Dundee, South Africa.
Social and Behavioral Sciences Department, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Mar 2;23(1):417. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15247-0.
Hypertension is the second leading risk factor for death in South Africa, and rates have steadily increased since the end of Apartheid. Research on the determinants of hypertension in South Africa has received considerable attention due to South Africa's rapid urbanization and epidemiological transition. However, scant work has been conducted to investigate how various segments of the Black South African population experience this transition. Identifying the correlates of hypertension in this population is critical to the development of policies and targeted interventions to strengthen equitable public health efforts.
This analysis explores the relationship between individual and area-level socioeconomic status and hypertension prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control within a sample of 7,303 Black South Africans in three municipalities of the uMgungundlovu district in KwaZulu-Natal province: the Msunduzi, uMshwathi, and Mkhambathini. Cross-sectional data were collected on participants from February 2017 to February 2018. Individual-level socioeconomic status was measured by employment status and educational attainment. Ward-level area deprivation was operationalized by the most recent (2011 and 2001) South African Multidimensional Poverty Index scores. Covariates included age, sex, BMI, and diabetes diagnosis.
The prevalence of hypertension in the sample was 44.4% (n = 3,240). Of those, 2,324 were aware of their diagnosis, 1,928 were receiving treatment, and 1,051 had their hypertension controlled. Educational attainment was negatively associated with hypertension prevalence and positively associated with its control. Employment status was negatively associated with hypertension control. Black South Africans living in more deprived wards had higher odds of being hypertensive and lower odds of having their hypertension controlled. Those residing in wards that became more deprived from 2001 to 2011 had higher odds of being aware of their hypertension, yet lower odds of receiving treatment for it.
Results from this study can assist policymakers and practitioners in identifying groups within the Black South African population that should be prioritized for public health interventions. Black South Africans who have and continue to face barriers to care, including those with low educational attainment or living in deprived wards had worse hypertension outcomes. Potential interventions include community-based programs that deliver medication to households, workplaces, or community centers.
高血压是南非第二大死亡风险因素,自种族隔离结束以来,其发病率稳步上升。由于南非快速的城市化和流行病学转变,南非高血压决定因素的研究受到了相当多的关注。然而,几乎没有研究致力于调查黑人群体的各个部分如何经历这种转变。确定该人群中高血压的相关因素对于制定政策和开展有针对性的干预措施以加强公平的公共卫生工作至关重要。
本分析探讨了个人和地区社会经济地位与高血压患病率、知晓率、治疗率和控制率之间的关系,该研究样本包括夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省乌姆古隆古杜卢地区三个市政当局的 7303 名黑人南非人:姆顺达齐、乌姆什瓦提和姆克哈马蒂尼。2017 年 2 月至 2018 年 2 月期间收集了参与者的横断面数据。个人社会经济地位通过就业状况和教育程度来衡量。区域贫困程度通过最近(2011 年和 2001 年)南非多维贫困指数得分来操作化。协变量包括年龄、性别、BMI 和糖尿病诊断。
该样本中高血压的患病率为 44.4%(n=3240)。其中,2324 人知晓自己的诊断,1928 人正在接受治疗,1051 人高血压得到控制。教育程度与高血压的患病率呈负相关,与控制率呈正相关。就业状况与高血压的控制呈负相关。居住在贫困程度较高的地区的黑人南非人患高血压的可能性更高,而高血压得到控制的可能性更低。那些居住在 2001 年至 2011 年变得更加贫困的地区的人,知晓自己高血压的可能性更高,但接受治疗的可能性更低。
本研究结果可以帮助政策制定者和实践者确定黑人南非人群体中应优先进行公共卫生干预的人群。那些面临医疗保健障碍的黑人南非人,包括受教育程度低或生活在贫困地区的人,高血压的结果更差。潜在的干预措施包括社区为基础的项目,将药物送到家庭、工作场所或社区中心。