Uncontrolled blood pressure in Australia: a call to action

Description

Globally, the leading risk factor for death is widely acknowledged as being raised blood pressure (BP). The Global Burden of Disease study found that a systolic BP of 110 mmHg and above accounted for 10.8 million deaths in 2019. This constitutes one in every five deaths, mainly due to coronary heart disease and cerebrovascular disease.

A report on deaths in Australia confirmed that also here the leading cause of death is coronary heart disease, followed by dementia and cerebrovascular disease — with coronary disease, vascular dementia and cerebrovascular disease sharing a common risk factor: raised BP. Australian data have shown raised BP to be responsible for 43% of coronary heart disease, 41% of stroke, 65% of the burden of hypertensive heart disease, 38% of chronic kidney disease, 32% of atrial fibrillation and flutter, and 3.6% of dementia.

This MJA Perspective shares more.

 

Learning Outcomes

  1. Explain key components of the perspective.
  2. List main recommendations.
  3. Recognise changes in management in response to the perspective.

 

Authors: Aletta E Schutte, Ruth Webster, Garry Jennings and Markus P Schlaich

Article Type: Perspective

 

N/A
Reading: journal; textbook; book; literature review
1h : 0m
MBA: 1h : 0m
Cardiovascular Diseases
Medical Practitioner, Medical Student, Doctor-in-Training, Exercise Physiologist, Non-Vocationally Registered, Nurse / Midwife, Occupational Therapist, Physiotherapist, Retired, Specialist - Other, Specialist General Practitioner
You have to be logged in to see the content of this module.

Provided by

doctorportal Learning respectfully acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the first inhabitants of Australia. We respect the traditional owners of lands across Australia in which our members and staff work and live, and pay respect to their elders past, present and emerging.