Clinical high blood pressure prevalence in HHANES for Mexican American and Puerto Rican women was one-fourth to one-fifth the rate of White women in NHANESII, suggesting HHANES may be unreliable.
Cross-Sectional
Hypertension
HHANES clinical examination vs NHANESII clinical examination (White women)
Prevalence of elevated blood pressure readings
Using data from the HHANES, we found the rates of elevated blood pressure readings on clinical examination to be extremely low for a sample of Mexican American and Puerto Rican women. The prevalence rates were one-fourth to one-fifth the rates found for a comparable sample of White women from NHANESII. These findings are discrepant with the little that is known about hypertension prevalence among Hispanics and with estimates of hypertension prevalence for Mexican Americans and Puerto Ricans drawn from NHANESII. While our HHANES samples women had much lower rates of clinical high blood pressure than Whites, they reported hypertension histories in excess of Whites. Rates of medicine usage among Hispanics were insufficiently large for effective treatment to explain the disparity. The prevalence estimates increased, but the relative discrepancies remained when we altered our sample specifications and clinical high blood pressure measure. A possible explanation for these discrepancies is that few physicians performed the majority of blood pressure readings in our HHANES sample. This may have been statistically inefficient. The discrepancies noted suggest that HHANES may not be a reliable source of information on hypertension among Hispanic women.
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Arline T. Geronimus
Center for Health and Gender Equity
Lisa Neidert
University of Michigan
John Bound
University of Michigan
American Journal of Public Health
University of Michigan
Department of Health Services
Ecolab (United States)
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Geronimus et al. (Sat,) conducted a cross-sectional in Hypertension. HHANES clinical examination vs. NHANESII clinical examination (White women) was evaluated on Prevalence of elevated blood pressure readings. Clinical high blood pressure prevalence in HHANES for Mexican American and Puerto Rican women was one-fourth to one-fifth the rate of White women in NHANESII, suggesting HHANES may be unreliable.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a16d10ec7240d1a707ba5ee — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.80.12.1437