Blood pressure in black, white and Asian factory workers in Birmingham
Open Access
- 1 October 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP)
- Vol. 59 (696) , 622-626
- https://doi.org/10.1136/pgmj.59.696.622
Abstract
Summary: A screening survey was conducted among factory workers, aged 15-64 years, in Birmingham, England to investigate ethnic differences in blood pressure. One-thousand and forty-nine subjects (784 men, 265 women) were screened, representing 79% of the eligible population. Mean systolic and diastolic blood pressures generally did not differ between men of black West Indian (n = 173), local white (n = 439) or Asian (n = 172) origin, when matched by 10-year age groups. Analysis of covariance using age as the covariate revealed that, overall, Asian men had significantly lower systolic but higher diastolic pressures than the other ethnic groups. The proportion of men arbitrarily defined as hypertensive (greater than or equal to 160 mmHg systolic or greater than or equal to 95 diastolic or blood pressures below this figure whilst receiving antihypertensive therapy) was 26% of West Indians, 22% of whites and 17% of Asians, but these were not significantly different when age was accounted for. Black West Indian women (n = 101) did have higher diastolic pressure than white women (n = 164), but this difference was dependent on body mass index. Overall, systolic pressures in women were not significantly different. These findings differ from those consistently reported from the United States.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Coronary heart disease in black populations II. Risk factorsAmerican Heart Journal, 1982
- Cardiac response to exercise in patients with chronic aortic regurgitationAmerican Heart Journal, 1982
- Heart attack, stroke, diabetes, and hypertension in West Indians, Asians, and whites in Birmingham, England.BMJ, 1980
- Hypertension in a population sample of female Punjabi Indians in Southall.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1980
- Ethnic group comparisons of variables associated with ischaemic heart disease.Heart, 1978
- Multivariate analysis of the relationship of seven variables to blood pressure: Findings of the Chicago Heart Association Detection Project in Industry, 1967–1972Journal of Chronic Diseases, 1975
- Socioecological stressor areas and black-white blood pressure: DetroitJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1973
- Summary of Major Findings of the Evans County Cardiovascular StudiesArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1971
- The Distribution of Arterial Pressure in Wales and JamaicaPathobiology, 1961
- Blood Pressure Studies in Rural and Urban Groups in DelhiCirculation, 1959