The Quality of Life of Patients With Hypertension
Open Access
- 31 May 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Clinical Hypertension
- Vol. 4 (3) , 181-188
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1524-6175.2002.00970.x
Abstract
The authors evaluated the self‐reported quality of life in patients with systemic arterial hypertension and assessed whether clinicians and normotensive respondents from the general public appreciate the impact that hypertension has on health‐related quality of life. A quality‐of‐life questionnaire was completed by 385 individuals: persons with hypertension (n=188), normotensive persons (n=148), and clinicians (n=49). A utility score, which represents one's self‐perceived health‐related quality of life, was generated for each group by using standardized time tradeoff questionnaires. Quality of life with hypertension was judged to be significantly higher according to affected individuals (mean utility score, 0.980), compared with normotensive persons (mean utility score, 0.948) and clinicians (mean utility score, 0.942), who were asked to assume that they had hypertension (pKeywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quality of life associated with diabetes mellitus in an adult populationJournal of Diabetes and its Complications, 2000
- Quality of life as an outcome measurePostgraduate Medical Journal, 1997
- A CLINICIAN'S GUIDE TO UTILITY MEASUREMENTPrimary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1995
- Prevalence of Hypertension in the US Adult PopulationHypertension, 1995
- Utilities and Quality-Adjusted Life YearsInternational Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care, 1989
- Methodology for measuring health-state preferences—II: Scaling methodsJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1989
- Measurement of health state utilities for economic appraisalJournal of Health Economics, 1986
- The Sickness Impact Profile: Development and Final Revision of a Health Status MeasureMedical Care, 1981
- A quantitative approach to perceived health status: a validation study.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1980
- A comparative evaluation of the Symptom Rating Test and the Langner 22-item Index for use in epidemiological surveysPsychological Medicine, 1980