Thursday, 14 March 2013

15 March, 2013


India to monitor hypertension more closely
India is exploring the possibility of having a national monitoring framework to help check hypertension cases, a WHO official said on Thursday. The national monitoring framework will try and amalgamate suggestions of the global monitoring framework for hypertension which will be adopted next month, the WHO official, who did not wish to be named, told reporters on the sidelines of anworkshop in New Delhi.
Officials of the health ministry met WHO officials and decided to explore the possibility of such a mechanism, she said. According to data available with the WHO, 36 percent of Indians would be suffering from cardiac problems out of which 10 percent would be due to hypertension by 2030. There were nine global targets which may be adopted. These included reducing deaths due to hypertension by 25 percent by 2025, reducing salt intake by 30 percent by 2025, encouraging physical activity and avoiding tobacco, the WHO official said.
According to D. Prabhakaran, executive director, Centre for Chronic Disease Control, a group of health professionals, the health ministry was also looking at utilising services of grassroot community health workers called ASHA (accredited social health activist) to prevent hypertension in rural areas. As part of a two-year study carried out by the Indian Council of Medical Research, 60 panchayats were selected from six states to see the viability of the project, he said. The states are Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Puducherry, Odisha and Karnataka. ‘The community health workers will try and reduce salt intake and other lifestyle changes,’ he said.
Sailesh Mohan, senior research scientist and associate professor at the Public Health Foundation of India, said: ‘Increased migration to urban areas has increased the risk of hypertension for the migrant population.’ ‘When people migrate, it takes them around 10 years to completely urbanise themselves and that is the time when the disease burden asserts itself,’ Prabhakaran said. Problems like malnutrition in early childhood can increase the risk of hypertension later in life, he said. ‘Lower the level of education, higher the incidence of hypertension.’ Around 20-40 percent of urban Indians and 12-17 percent of rural Indians are suffering from hypertension. Renu Garg, regional advisor, non-communicable disease, WHO regional office for South-East Asia, said: ‘Unhealthy lifestyles are killing people’.
15.03.2013





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