Prevalence, awareness, treatment and control of hypertension in Greece: national epidemiological study emeno
Datum
2021Language
el
Schlagwort
Zusammenfassung
OBJECTIVE Investigation of the prevalence, awareness, treatment and control of hypertension in Greece through the nationwide epidemiological study EMENO (2013–2016). METHOD The multi-stage stratified random sampling method was applied to select a representative sample of the adult (≥18 years) general population involving 577 areas throughout Greece. Hypertension was defined as blood pressure (BP) ≥140/90 mmHg (average of 2nd–3rd mea-surement) and or use of antihypertensive drugs. Three BP measurements were obtained using validated electronic upper-arm device. RESULTS A total of 6,006 individuals were recruited and 4,699 with complete data were analyzed with mean age 49.2±18.6 years, 48.6% men, and mean body mass index (BMI) 28.2±5.7 kg/m². The prevalence of hypertension was 39.6% (men/women 42.7/36.5%; p<0.001). Among hypertensive subjects, 31.8% were unaware, 2.7% were aware but untreated, 35.1% were treated but uncontrolled, and 30.5% treated and controlled. CONCLUSIONS The ΕΜΕΝΟ epidemiologic study in a general population sample of adults in Greece showed that the prevalence of hypertension is rising and affects 40% of the adults. Among patients with hypertension, about 1/3 are undiagnosed and less than 1/3 are controlled with treatment. Nationwide programs for the prevention, detection and control of hypertension in Greece are needed, aimed at improving BP control and preventing a rise in the incidence of cardiovascular diseases the next decades. © Athens Medical Society.