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Pate Lists Risk Factors of Stroke in NigeriaThe Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Muhammad Ali P...
02/11/2024

Pate Lists Risk Factors of Stroke in Nigeria

The Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Muhammad Ali Pate, has attributed high incidence of stroke in Nigeria to underlying factors such as hypertension, diabetes, obesity, poor dietary choices, alcohol use, smoking, and a sedentary lifestyle.

He said hypertension alone contributes to up to 90 percent of all stroke cases.

A statement by the Director, Press and Public Relations, Deworitshe Patricia, said the minister revealed that from hospital-based data, stroke was the most common cause of adult neurological admissions in many parts of the country.

According to Pate, up to 40 percent of patients admitted for acute strokes in Nigeria do not survive beyond 30 days.

The Minister stated this at a ministerial press briefing to commemorate the world stroke day with the theme, “Together we are Stroke,” held in Abuja.

While calling for heightened awareness and proactive measures to combat the high incidence of stroke in Nigeria, Pate said that federal government launched the National Hypertension Control Initiative (NHCI) in August 2019.

According to the Minister, the initiative focuses on strengthening PHC Centres to prevent and manage hypertension.

He said the initiative has made significant progress with its simplified hypertension treatment protocol implemented in numerous PHC Centres across the country.

In addition, Pate said support heart emergencies, the Nigerian Heart Foundation had procured Automated External Defibrillators (AEDs) for deployment in high-population areas such as airports.

“AEDs are portable life-saving medical devices used to revive sudden cardiac arrest victims, ” he added.

Pate, further stated that the World Stroke Organisation reports that stroke was the leading cause of disability worldwide, affecting over 12 million people each year.

Furthermore, Pate said stroke was a cardiovascular disease that occurs when the blood supply to the brain is reduced or blocked, depriving brain tissue of essential oxygen and nutrients.

“Symptoms can range from paralysis or numbness on one side of the body, confusion, difficulty speaking or swallowing, impaired coordination, to severe headaches. Immediate medical attention is vital in the event of a stroke.”

Pate disclosed that strategic policy documents aimed at preventing cardiovascular diseases had been developed- including a National Non Communicable Diseases (NCDs) Policy, Multi-Sectoral Action Plan on NCDs and national guidelines for prevention, control and management of hypertension noting that the Ministry has also developed guidelines for other NCDs- diabetes, and sickle cell disease, and currently implementing the National To***co Control Act 2015 and Regulations 2019.

The Minister therefore enjoined health workers to come together to share key messages on stroke prevention and take action that will help individuals understand and address these risks.

Earlier, the Director, Public Health Department, Dr. Chukwuma Anyaike, stated that Nigeria bears a significant burden of stroke noting that current data indicates crude stroke prevalence rates as high as 1331 cases.

RELIGION, IGNORANCE AND HEALTHA close friend and brother had invited me to participate in a free health service organise...
01/11/2024

RELIGION, IGNORANCE AND HEALTH

A close friend and brother had invited me to participate in a free health service organised by their church. When I arrived at the place, there was a “multitude” waiting to be attended to. After exchanging pleasantries with my brother friend and his pastor, I used Jesus’ words: “Indeed, the harvest is plenty, but the labourers are few.” They laughed.

In our society, people hardly go for medical check-ups, or even to hospitals. And when they have need of medical attention, they go instead to “chemists”, roadside and motor park herbal sellers, and quacks. Well, until things get bad. Only free medical services and free drugs could have brought that crowd to that church that day.

Perhaps you don’t know it, but there is an epidemic of diabetes and hypertension. Yet, many people don’t know their health status. One “lucky” man only knew he was hypertensive when he came for a police report after he got a stab injury on his hand at a bus stop from a bus conductor he never knew, and whom he never provoked! For one 70-year-old woman what brought her was a loose punch that her son meant for her daughter-in-law which found her abdomen. What of the landlady and her “stubborn” tenant who assaulted her? Or the man a policeman slapped. God works in mysterious ways!

But on that day, many were told they had diabetes and hypertension for the first time. Many took the advice seriously, while some were in denial. I heard this statement often: “But doctor I don’t think”, on why they could have developed hypertension, to which I always reply, “Only the dead stop thinking.”

Primary or essential hypertension, which is the commonest type of hypertension, has no known cause, but there are risk factors, like family history, age, race, male s*x, obesity, excessive sodium salt intake, low potassium intake, low vitamin D, excessive alcohol, to***co, stress, and not being physically active. Hypertension and diabetes can cause the kidneys to fail, apart from the risk of stroke and other complications.

There is always the query on when they should stop using their drugs. My answer is usually “You must never stop your drugs! They must never finish!” Their faces fall.

Amazingly, patients find it convenient to swallow all sorts of “supplements” often sent from family members “abroad”, but find it difficult to take their antidiabetics and antihypertensives. But these medications should not be seen as a burden but as a life-saver. They prolong lives.

I let my hypertensive patients realise that they are extremely lucky to have the consultation and that they must not misuse it by being non-compliant. Many never had that chance!

Now, as we were rounding off, there was this particular woman who was in a white garment church apparel with a cap. What she wore was peculiar. Everything about her said she must be a high-ranking member of that church. I sensed her hesitation. But she sat down all the same. Then, I took her blood pressure. Even as a doctor, what I saw startled me. She had severe hypertension or what we call hypertensive urgency which is a very dangerous level. It was a surprise she had not had a stroke. I told her my findings and she said “But I feel okay, nothing is wrong with me”. But I told her that hypertension gave no symptoms, that when it does, it means complications had already set in. She continued to remonstrate as if that would change her circumstance, or even make me change my diagnosis. I explained to her the need for compliance that she needed to be observed in a hospital and that she was to do some investigations. For a moment my message seemed to sink. Her eyes seemed to spark. Then her lips curled. Suddenly she stood up. I must have touched a raw nerve I thought to myself. But I had done my part. My friend who invited me saw what transpired and had to lend his voice. But by then, I was already with another patient. It was after that my pal told me that the white garment woman was a “prophetess” in her church. But what bothered her most was how she was going to relate this experience to her church members, whom she had preached to that they don’t need to go to hospitals and that they would get “divine healing” in the church. Ignorance is a scourge. It helps propagate and perpetuate diseases.

We have had patients who we told they could only deliver through caesarian section retorting “I reject it!” or “It’s not my portion!” When you reinforce your advice, they go for advice from their pastor. It is the pastor who will decide the mode of delivery! A few who have good pastors will tell them the truth, that is they should follow their doctors’ advice. But unfortunately, in a good number of cases, the pastors will tell them that “the doctors are lying.” When they realise she can’t deliver after the woman must have gone through prolonged labour, they bring themselves back to the hospital, often with life-threatening complications. Some don’t make it back to the hospital alive!

A pastor once confessed to me that he told his church members to stop using their medication, but that prayer will lead to a “lasting cure”. He had also developed diabetes and followed his advice to his church members. But his blood sugar was getting very high, and he was becoming very sick. It was then that he accepted medical care. I told him that his church members may get away with it, but that for him God will judge him differently because apart from being a pastor, he was also educated. For it was with what you are and know that you will be judged.

Many pastors out of ignorance, foolishness, or both, put the lives of their church members in danger. They make reference to the Bible, but take it out of context. Jesus himself said it is only those who are sick that need a physician; he did not say those who are sick need a pastor. Jesus spit on the ground mixed the spit with clay and used the mixture as a “medication” for a blind man’s eyes. After Jesus healed, He told them to show themselves to the priests.

The early priests in the Old Testament doubled as physicians. In those days they wore hoods, and the hood was for those they healed to put the priests’ reward inside them.

It is thought that Leviticus is the first documented health code in the world. The book talked about personal and community responsibilities. It also touched on the cleanliness of the body, s*xual health, and attitudes, that we should protect against contagious diseases, and that lepers should be isolated.

Hippocrates (460 BC-380 BC) founded Western medicine. In his On Airs, Waters, and Places published in the fifth century, he said, “Whoever wishes to investigate medicine properly, should proceed thus: in the first place to consider the seasons of the year, and what effects each of them produces. We must also consider the qualities of the waters and the mode in which the inhabitants live, and what are their pursuits, whether they are fond of drinking and eating to excess, and given to indolence, or are fond of exercise and labour, and not given to excess in eating and drinking.”

Around this period, Greeks practised community sanitation. Romans added improvements to Greek engineering in building aqueducts to protect water supplies. They were the ones who created the first hospital.

The Middle Ages, also known as “The Dark Ages, there was an ending of Roman ideology. Health problems were believed to have spiritual causes and solutions. Illness was thought to be as a result of sin which made the victim stigmatised. As the environment was not seen as playing a part in diseases, it led to epidemics.

With the Renaissance, it was realised that saints also became sick as sinners. People started rethinking nature and humans.

Blind faith in religion takes people’s minds away from conventional medical treatment. People refuse medical treatment both for themselves and their family members on this ground.

Some deny medical treatment because their religion prohibits the form of treatment. While some others deny medical treatment because it will seem to them as if they do not have faith in God.

It has also been shown that those who are religious fundamentalists are the ones most likely to decline medical treatment even if the health condition is life-threatening.

A psychologist Richard P. Sloan in the Lancet and the New England Journal of Medicine said, “Religion may encourage magical thinking as people pray for and expect physical healing as if God were a giant genie at the beck and call of every human whim. Then, if physical healing does not come immediately, the person may be disappointed and disheartened, claiming that the prayer was not answered and that God does not care, or, worse, that the illness was sent by an angry, vengeful God as a punishment.”

According to Sloan, there has been resistance to childhood immunisation because of a faulty belief in religion resulting in outbreaks of polio, rubella, whooping cough, and other infectious diseases.

Diabetics and hypertensives stop their drugs in the name of religion. One woman developed a stroke in the church where she slept for days in search of a “permanent cure” for hypertension after she stopped her antihypertensives. She spent weeks in the medical ward.

Asser and Swan reported in 1998 in the medical journal Paediatrics that 172 children died between 1975 and 1995 when their parents withheld medical care on religious grounds.

In one church, some people who were told that they had been healed of HIV died after they stopped their medications.

After a Kathryn Kuhlman 1967 fellowship in Philadelphia, Dr. William A. Nolen conducted a case study involving 23 people who claimed to have been cured during her services.

Nolen followed the 23 on long-term follow-ups and concluded there were no cures in those cases. The report said, “One woman who was said to have been cured of spinal cancer threw away her brace and ran across the stage at Kuhlman’s command; her spine collapsed the next day, according to Nolen, and she died four months later.”

Miracles we ask for are extremely rare. And the kind of faith that will do that many of us and our pastors don’t have. Jesus knew that such a faith was hard to have, that was why he talked about a faith the size of a mustard seed, considered the smallest seed.

The American Medical Association says “that prayer as therapy should not be a medically reimburse [sic] or deductible expense.” ASA stated that “prayer as therapy should not delay access to traditional medical care.” Not doing so is attempting su***de.

We pray and search earnestly for miracles but don’t realise God’s countless unmerited favours — which we never even asked for.

That you are responding to medical treatment in itself is a miracle. Not all patients respond to treatment. That you are not a victim of fake or counterfeit drugs in your treatment is another miracle.

Sometimes God allows your disease to serve as a constant reminder of your mortality — and of Him! Without problems, many will not serve God.

For religious zealots, there is reason not to despair. God himself said, “Then give place to the physician, for the Lord hath created him: let him not go from thee, for thou hast need of him.” Eccl:38.12. God has made the physician to carry your burden. After all, you say, “After God na doctor.”

The logo for medicine derives from Greek mythology, the Rod of Asclepius. According to Wikipedia, it is a “serpent-entwined rod wielded by the Greek god Asclepius, a deity associated with healing and medicine. The symbol has continued to be used in modern times, where it is associated with medicine and health care.”

The original Hippocratic Oath began with the invocation “I swear by Apollo the Physician and by Asclepius and by Hygieia and Panacea and by all the gods …” But others link the symbol to the Nehushtan, a sacred object that has a brass serpent wrapped around a pole that God told Moses to make, so that anyone who had been bitten by a snake who looked at it would be healed.

The Great Physician Jesus endorsed the symbol of medicine, and indeed the healing and miracle in the medical profession when he said he would be lifted up as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, to give life to those who believe in Him.

Religion can be good for the health. It helps healing, it gives hope. But we should not allow it to be a threat to our health. Even the scripture warned: “Don’t put thy Lord thy God to the test!”

Healthy Heart Africa Marks Nine Years of Impacting Sub-Saharan AfricaThis World Heart Day, AstraZeneca and partners are ...
31/10/2024

Healthy Heart Africa Marks Nine Years of Impacting Sub-Saharan Africa

This World Heart Day, AstraZeneca and partners are commemorating nine years of impact in the fight against hypertension, helping to decrease the burden of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) through the Healthy Heart Africa (HHA) programme.

Since its inception in 2014, the programme has conducted over 38.5 million blood pressure screenings; diagnosed over 3.1 million people; trained over 10,600 healthcare workers, including doctors, nurses, community health volunteers and pharmacists to provide education and awareness, screening and treatment services; and activated over 1,300 healthcare facilities to provide hypertension services.

To mark the programme’s nine-year anniversary, AstraZeneca and partners are hosting a webinar to take stock of achievements to date and discuss future strategies to tackle the rising burden of CVDs and NCDs across Africa. The discussion will feature insights on the role of public-private partnerships in supporting primary healthcare, drawing on lessons from the HHA programme.

Panellists will include representatives from Ministries of Health in implementing countries and programme partners, including PATH, Population Services International (PSI), Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops (KCCB), African Christian Health Associations Platform (ACHAP), and Uganda Protestant Medical Bureau (UPMB).

Dr. Yvette Kisaka, Programs, Division of NCD prevention and control, Ministry of Health Kenya said: “We need to strengthen health systems to achieve Universal Health Coverage, as envisioned by Sustainable Development Goal 3 on good health and wellbeing. That is why, together with partners, we are developing strategies such as the National Guidelines for the Management of Cardiovascular Diseases. We applaud the Healthy Heart Africa programme’s pivotal role in the fight against cardiovascular disease in Kenya and continue to collaborate with all stakeholders to ensure a healthier future for our citizens.”

Healthy Heart Africa is committed to tackling hypertension and the rising burden of CVDs and NCDs in Africa. The programme is on track to achieve its ambition of reaching 10 million people with elevated blood pressure by 2025, with 7.7 million readings recorded thus far1.

HHA supports local health system resilience by addressing the barriers that prevent access to care by increasing awareness of the symptoms and risks of hypertension and educating around healthy lifestyle choices; training providers and driving care to lower levels of the healthcare system; and offering health screening, and access to treatment and disease management.

In less than a decade, HHA has successfully implemented and expanded a multi-stakeholder model to deliver improved and more equitable health outcomes across the continent.

Starting its journey in Kenya in 2014 and subsequently expanding to Ethiopia, Tanzania, Ghana, Uganda, Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal and Rwanda, Nigeria and Zanzibar, HHA supports sustainable models by working with local health systems. Our approach to addressing the burden of hypertension works best when integrated into existing health systems, working in partnership at a local level.

Qutaiba Al Manaseer, Senior Director of Corporate Affairs for the Middle East & Africa Region at AstraZeneca, said: “Healthy Heart Africa demonstrates the power of public-private partnerships in delivering sustainable solutions that strengthen the resilience of local health systems. We will continue collaborating with stakeholders to tackle the silent killer that is hypertension and to improve patient outcomes.”

According to the World Health Organization, hypertension affects 1 in 3 adults worldwide and Africa has the highest prevalence of hypertension in any region, with the number of adults suffering from high blood pressure in sub-Saharan Africa projected to reach 216.8 million by 2030. In 2019, more than 1 million deaths were due to cardiovascular diseases in sub-Saharan Africa, which constituted 5.4 per cent of all global CVD-related deaths and 13 per cent of all deaths in Africa.

Healthy Heart Africa (HHA) is AstraZeneca’s innovative programme committed to tackling hypertension (high blood pressure) and the increasing burden of cardiovascular disease (CVDs) in Africa. To achieve this, HHA supports local health systems by increasing awareness of the symptoms and risks of hypertension and by offering education, screening, reduced-cost treatment (where applicable), and control. The programme is currently active in both East and West Africa. Please visit AstraZeneca Healthy Heart Africa.

AstraZeneca is a global, science-led biopharmaceutical company that focuses on the discovery, development, and commercialisation of prescription medicines in Oncology, Rare Diseases and Biopharmaceuticals’, including Cardiovascular, Renal and Metabolism.

Over 8 Million Lagosians Living With Blood PressureThe Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Prof. Akin Abayomi, yesterda...
30/10/2024

Over 8 Million Lagosians Living With Blood Pressure

The Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Prof. Akin Abayomi, yesterday, revealed that over 8,670,000 residents have high blood pressure with hypertension prevalence rate of 30 per cent, while 70 per cent are unaware.

Abayomi, who explained this during a media chat said that a significant portion of the city’s 30 million residents’ population are living with hypertension, diabetes, and obesity—yet many remain unaware of their dire situations.

“With a hypertension prevalence rate of 30 per cent, a staggering 8.67 million people in Lagos are affected by high blood pressure. Even more concerning, 70 per cent of those living with hypertension, which amounts to over six million individuals, are completely unaware of their condition. Hypertension is a leading cause of heart disease, strokes, and kidney failure, making this lack of awareness particularly dangerous,” he said.

In a groundbreaking public health effort, the Lagos State Government has launched a state-wide free screening for hypertension and diabetes for residents, an initiative under the Nigeria Governors’ Forum nationwide ‘10 Million Project’ campaign aimed at addressing the silent killers of hypertension and diabetes.

The campaign tagged: “Know Your Numbers, Control Your Numbers” is set to run from Monday October 28 to Sunday November 3, 2024 and will provide free screenings for blood pressure and blood sugar across all local government areas in the state, with a goal of screening 800,000 Lagosians within the one-week window, as part of the Lagos quota of the 10 million Nigeria project.

Abayomi introduced the public to what he termed the “silent killers”: diabetes, obesity, and hypertension. He elaborated on how these conditions often progress without symptoms, quietly causing damage to organs like the heart, eyes, and kidneys.

“While diabetes, obesity, and hypertension may appear benign initially, they silently wreak havoc on the body, sometimes with deadly consequences,” he noted.

The health commissioner described the early symptoms of diabetes, which include constant thirst, frequent urination, fatigue, and slow-healing wounds.

He explained that hypertension, often asymptomatic in its early stages, may manifest later with headaches, dizziness, blurred vision, or even chest pain. The Commissioner warned that the “silent killers” can strike unexpectedly, leading to severe health issues if left undiagnosed.

To support accessible healthcare, Abayomi said the Lagos State Government through its social health insurance scheme – Ilera Eko Health Insurance Scheme, allows subscribers to access year-round check-ups for hypertension and diabetes on the standard premium package.

“We want to remove barriers to regular check-ups,” Abayomi affirmed, adding that this service aims to reduce long-term health complications through early diagnosis and lifestyle modification.

In her remarks, the Special Adviser to the Governor on Health, Dr. Kemi Ogunyemi, expressed concern about the tendency for individuals to overlook free health services due to a lack of awareness.

“We are seeing that free resources alone may not be enough. We need people to take ownership of their health, make regular check-ups a habit, and use available resources,” Ogunyemi said.

Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr. Gbenga Omotoso, shared his personal story on the importance of regular screenings.

He spoke on the impact of daily stress, especially in high-pressure professions like journalism, and urged members of the press to prioritise their health.

“The campaign is more than a health check,” he remarked, “It’s a call to every Lagosian to take proactive steps in managing their health.”

Under Preasure: Strategies to Improve Access to Medicines to Treat High Blood Pressure
29/10/2024

Under Preasure: Strategies to Improve Access to Medicines to Treat High Blood Pressure

High blood pressure, known as hypertension, is the world’s leading cause of death, killing more than 10 million people every year – more than all infectious ...

Scientists discover better treatment for hypertensionNew and more effective treatment for high blood pressure could be o...
24/10/2024

Scientists discover better treatment for hypertension

New and more effective treatment for high blood pressure could be on the way, what with the discovery that the nitric oxide that regulates blood pressure is formed in the nerves rather than in the walls of blood vessels.

The study was published in the journal Hypertension.

Researchers at the King’s College London had built on previous work that established the fundamental role that nitric oxide plays in regulating blood pressure.

The study, which was supported by funds from the British Heart Foundation, the National Institute for Health Research, Biomedical Research Centre at Guy’s and St. Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London, treated healthy human subjects with a drug that prevented an enzyme in the nerves from producing nitric oxide.

Once the enzyme had stopped producing nitric oxide, the team were able to measure the impact the gas from that source had.

To their surprise, reducing production of nitric oxide led to a significant increase in the force that opposed the flow of blood, known as vascular resistance, and blood pressure itself.

The Chair of Cardiology at King’s College Hospital and lead scientist on the trial at King’s College London, Prof. Ajay Shah, said: “We used an inhibitor drug to stop an enzyme in the nerves from producing nitric oxide.

“While we suspected that stopping this enzyme would have some effect, we were surprised at how much influence it has on blood pressure.

“Our discovery will fundamentally change the way we view the regulation of blood pressure, because, until now, most blood pressure drugs had focussed on other pathways.

“Establishing that nerves releasing nitric oxide influence blood pressure, provides a new target for drugs and could eventually lead to more effective treatments for patients.”

Associate Medical Director at the British Heart Foundation, Prof. Jeremy Pearson, noted that, “Understanding how blood pressure is regulated is crucial if we hope to develop new potential treatments to lower it.

“This study adds a very unexpected piece to the puzzle of blood pressure regulation.

“While there are already many treatments for high blood pressure, they are not always effective.

“These results provide hope of new treatments for people with poorly controlled high blood pressure, which could prove crucial in preventing a heart attack or stroke.”

Your chance to win an iPhone is here! Subscribe and share with friends!
23/10/2024

Your chance to win an iPhone is here! Subscribe and share with friends!

FG to place 80% hypertensive Nigerians on treatmentThe Federal Government said it has instituted strategic interventions...
23/10/2024

FG to place 80% hypertensive Nigerians on treatment

The Federal Government said it has instituted strategic interventions at the Tertiary, Secondary, and Primary Health Care levels to screen at least 80 per cent of the eligible population and place 80 per cent of people with hypertension on standard treatment and care.

The FG also said it working towards ensuring that 80 per cent of those on treatment have their blood pressure controlled to avert complications and to reduce premature death as a result of cardiovascular diseases and other non-communicable diseases to 25 per cent.

The Minister of Health, Dr Osagie Ehanire, who made this known in Abuja on Wednesday, during the commemoration of this year’s World Hypertension Day, with the theme: “Measure Your Blood Pressure Accurately, Control It, Live Longer,” said hypertension is responsible for significant morbidity and mortality in the country.

Usually, people with hypertension do not have any specific signs or symptoms directly attributed to the condition. Symptoms are usually foreboding of damage to specific organs in the body, including the heart, brain, eyes, and kidneys, resulting from poor control.

Ehanire, who was represented by the Director of Public Health at the Ministry, Dr. Morenike Alex-Okoh, said: “Hypertension is the leading cardiovascular disease and NCDs, and it is responsible for significant morbidity and mortality, with the low-and-middle-income countries responsible for nearly 80 per cent of the global cardiovascular disease burden.

“It is worrisome that the burden of hypertension is disproportionately more in the low- and middle-income countries in recent decades due to the increase in the prevalence of risk factors such as to***co use, physical inactivity, unhealthy diet, and harmful alcohol consumption. The significant burden is further accentuated by the high proportion of persons that are unaware of their condition, putting them at risk of avoidable medical complications and death.

“It is important to note that public awareness creation, education, routine screening at every opportunity, early detection and diagnosis, counselling, and prompt provision of standard treatment and care are essentials elements for hypertension prevention and control, otherwise hypertension can lead to fatal complications such as heart disease, heart failure, stroke, blindness, chronic kidney failure, dementia, etc.

“Hypertension is preventable and can easily be detected and treated – its control is paramount in reducing the burden of cardiovascular disease in the country. For those on treatment, please avoid the temptation of stopping your medication and follow-up clinic visits without advice from your doctor or the health care worker attending to you.”

In her message, the World Health Organisation Regional Director for Africa, Dr Matshidiso Moeti, said, close to 40 per cent of adults aged 30-79 years are in the African region, and only a quarter of these are taking medicines.

“Optimal blood pressure control is only attained in 11 per cent of patients on medication. Hypertension is an important risk factor for CVDs mostly heart attack, stroke, and heart failure which account for a significant burden of premature mortality from NCDs.

“Hypertension is easy to diagnose, and there are safe and cost-effective treatments, including pharmacologic and behaviour change interventions. WHO has prioritized decentralized management and care for NCDs including management of hypertension, using the WHO Package of Essential Noncommunicable disease interventions for primary healthcare.

“In addition, the WHO has published a guidance on the technical specification for automated blood pressure monitoring devices to ensure improved access to accurate, affordable blood pressure devices which is often a significant barrier to proper medical care in low-resource settings. We need to regularly check our blood pressure and in case it is raised, adhere to medications as prescribed by the health provider,” she said.

She added that addressing hypertension in Africa requires a multi-faceted approach that involves individuals, communities, and governments working together.

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