Association between hypertension and self-perception of health status: Findings from a decade population-based survey in Spanish adults
Jesús Martín-Fernández, Tamara Alonso-Safont, Elena Polentinos-Castro, Gemma Rodríguez-Martínez, Mª Isabel González-Anglada, Amaia Bilbao-González, Isabel del-Cura-González, Hoh Boon-Peng, Hoh Boon-Peng, Hoh Boon-Peng, Hoh Boon-Peng

TL;DR
This study shows that adults with hypertension in Spain are less likely to rate their health as 'very good', even after accounting for other factors like age and lifestyle.
Contribution
The study identifies a novel association between hypertension diagnosis and self-perceived health status, independent of other chronic conditions or lifestyle factors.
Findings
Hypertension diagnosis is linked to a 6.2% lower chance of reporting 'very good' health.
Antihypertensive medication is associated with a 4.5% lower chance of reporting 'very good' health.
The association remains significant even after adjusting for age, gender, and other chronic conditions.
Abstract
This study, conducted in the community setting, aimed to assess and discuss how a diagnosis of arterial hypertension affects self-perceived health status, examining the association with potential explanatory factors and comparing its impact with that of other chronic conditions. Cross-sectional observational study using the 2011–2012 and 2017 Spanish National Health Surveys and the 2020 European Health Interview Survey for Spain as data sources. Health perception was categorised as very good, good, fair, bad, or very bad. The independent variables recorded demographic, social, clinical, and lifestyle information. The associations between variables were evaluated via a generalisation of an ordered logit model. A total of 66,168 subjects were included (21,007 in 2011, 23,089 in 2017, and 22,072 in 2020), 21.6% of whom were diagnosed with hypertension, 51.3% were women, and the average…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood Pressure and Hypertension Studies · Health disparities and outcomes · Nutritional Studies and Diet
