Distribution and characteristics of risk factors for cardiovascular–metabolic disease in a rural Kenyan community

Background: The rising prevalence of non-communicable diseases and associated premature mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa contradicts the widely accepted premise that African countries are only dominated by infectious diseases, malnutrition, maternal and child deaths. Among the non-communicable diseas...

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Main Authors: James Muchira, Eileen Stuart-Shor, Jacob Kariuki, Anne Mukuna, Irene Ndigirigi, Lucy Gakage, Vincent Mutuma, Anna Karani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-01-01
Series:International Journal of Africa Nursing Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214139115000244
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spelling doaj-33350dd1e31a47f7afeb2a7aee4679e22020-11-25T00:09:21ZengElsevierInternational Journal of Africa Nursing Sciences2214-13912015-01-013C768110.1016/j.ijans.2015.09.002Distribution and characteristics of risk factors for cardiovascular–metabolic disease in a rural Kenyan communityJames Muchira0Eileen Stuart-Shor1Jacob Kariuki2Anne Mukuna3Irene Ndigirigi4Lucy Gakage5Vincent Mutuma6Anna Karani7University of Massachusetts, Boston, College of Nursing and Health Sciences, United StatesUniversity of Massachusetts, Boston, College of Nursing and Health Sciences, United StatesUniversity of Massachusetts, Boston, College of Nursing and Health Sciences, United StatesPCEA Tumutumu Hospital School of Nursing, KenyaPCEA Tumutumu Hospital School of Nursing, KenyaMinistry of Health, Kenya, Nyeri County, KenyaPCEA Tumutumu Hospital School of Nursing, KenyaUniversity of Nairobi, KenyaBackground: The rising prevalence of non-communicable diseases and associated premature mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa contradicts the widely accepted premise that African countries are only dominated by infectious diseases, malnutrition, maternal and child deaths. Among the non-communicable diseases, hypertension and diabetes mellitus continue to be the leading cause of death worldwide, with 10–20 million people estimated to have hypertension in Sub-Saharan Africa and 12 million people reported to have diabetes mellitus in Africa. The purpose of this study was to assess the cardiovascular–metabolic characteristics of individuals living in one rural community in Central Kenya and to propose interventions to address their needs. Methods: A convenience sample of 262 individuals was screened/treated for cardiovascular–metabolic disease (CVMD) risk factors at a government operated community health center in Central Kenya. Self-reported estimates of physical activity, dietary intake, smoking and perceived health were obtained using questions drawn from the validated Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey. Standardized protocols (Jackson Heart Study) directed collection of physiologic measures (blood pressure, glucose, anthropometrics). Clinical data was abstracted and analyzed using Stata©. USA/Kenyan IRB/ethics approval was obtained. Results: N = 262, mean age 54 (SD ± 17.02) years; 81% women, 99% Kikuyu ethnicity. Self-reported history of diabetes mellitus was 4%, overweight (BMI ⩾ 25) 34%, and hypertension 47%. Systolic blood pressure ⩾140 mmHg increased with age [(12%, 39%, 52%) (<45, 45–64, 65+), respectively (p ⩽ .001)]. Glucose measures indicative of diabetes mellitus (⩾126 mg/dL fasting or ⩾200 mg/dL non-fasting) were 8.3%. Women were more likely than men to be overweight (39% vs 15%) (p = <0.001) and have elevated waist circumference (30% vs 6.3%). Self-reported lifestyle risk factors included: 10% were inactive; 68% of participants consumed <3 servings of vegetables per day; 69% used solid (saturated) fat for cooking; 89% added salt to cooking [with 28% adding salt at the table]; 9% drank soda daily/weekly, 3% currently smoked cigarettes. Overall 65% (n = 170) of the sample had moderate to high risk for cardiovascular factors on the Gaziano Global Risk Score Scale. Conclusions/recommendations: The prevalence of CVMD was high but some risk factors usually associated with CVMD were not observed. There is need for locally-tailored approaches in treatment and prevention of CVMD at the local level.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214139115000244Cardiovascular–metabolic diseaseHypertensionDiabetesPrevalence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James Muchira
Eileen Stuart-Shor
Jacob Kariuki
Anne Mukuna
Irene Ndigirigi
Lucy Gakage
Vincent Mutuma
Anna Karani
spellingShingle James Muchira
Eileen Stuart-Shor
Jacob Kariuki
Anne Mukuna
Irene Ndigirigi
Lucy Gakage
Vincent Mutuma
Anna Karani
Distribution and characteristics of risk factors for cardiovascular–metabolic disease in a rural Kenyan community
International Journal of Africa Nursing Sciences
Cardiovascular–metabolic disease
Hypertension
Diabetes
Prevalence
author_facet James Muchira
Eileen Stuart-Shor
Jacob Kariuki
Anne Mukuna
Irene Ndigirigi
Lucy Gakage
Vincent Mutuma
Anna Karani
author_sort James Muchira
title Distribution and characteristics of risk factors for cardiovascular–metabolic disease in a rural Kenyan community
title_short Distribution and characteristics of risk factors for cardiovascular–metabolic disease in a rural Kenyan community
title_full Distribution and characteristics of risk factors for cardiovascular–metabolic disease in a rural Kenyan community
title_fullStr Distribution and characteristics of risk factors for cardiovascular–metabolic disease in a rural Kenyan community
title_full_unstemmed Distribution and characteristics of risk factors for cardiovascular–metabolic disease in a rural Kenyan community
title_sort distribution and characteristics of risk factors for cardiovascular–metabolic disease in a rural kenyan community
publisher Elsevier
series International Journal of Africa Nursing Sciences
issn 2214-1391
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Background: The rising prevalence of non-communicable diseases and associated premature mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa contradicts the widely accepted premise that African countries are only dominated by infectious diseases, malnutrition, maternal and child deaths. Among the non-communicable diseases, hypertension and diabetes mellitus continue to be the leading cause of death worldwide, with 10–20 million people estimated to have hypertension in Sub-Saharan Africa and 12 million people reported to have diabetes mellitus in Africa. The purpose of this study was to assess the cardiovascular–metabolic characteristics of individuals living in one rural community in Central Kenya and to propose interventions to address their needs. Methods: A convenience sample of 262 individuals was screened/treated for cardiovascular–metabolic disease (CVMD) risk factors at a government operated community health center in Central Kenya. Self-reported estimates of physical activity, dietary intake, smoking and perceived health were obtained using questions drawn from the validated Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey. Standardized protocols (Jackson Heart Study) directed collection of physiologic measures (blood pressure, glucose, anthropometrics). Clinical data was abstracted and analyzed using Stata©. USA/Kenyan IRB/ethics approval was obtained. Results: N = 262, mean age 54 (SD ± 17.02) years; 81% women, 99% Kikuyu ethnicity. Self-reported history of diabetes mellitus was 4%, overweight (BMI ⩾ 25) 34%, and hypertension 47%. Systolic blood pressure ⩾140 mmHg increased with age [(12%, 39%, 52%) (<45, 45–64, 65+), respectively (p ⩽ .001)]. Glucose measures indicative of diabetes mellitus (⩾126 mg/dL fasting or ⩾200 mg/dL non-fasting) were 8.3%. Women were more likely than men to be overweight (39% vs 15%) (p = <0.001) and have elevated waist circumference (30% vs 6.3%). Self-reported lifestyle risk factors included: 10% were inactive; 68% of participants consumed <3 servings of vegetables per day; 69% used solid (saturated) fat for cooking; 89% added salt to cooking [with 28% adding salt at the table]; 9% drank soda daily/weekly, 3% currently smoked cigarettes. Overall 65% (n = 170) of the sample had moderate to high risk for cardiovascular factors on the Gaziano Global Risk Score Scale. Conclusions/recommendations: The prevalence of CVMD was high but some risk factors usually associated with CVMD were not observed. There is need for locally-tailored approaches in treatment and prevention of CVMD at the local level.
topic Cardiovascular–metabolic disease
Hypertension
Diabetes
Prevalence
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214139115000244
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