9 research outputs found
COMMUNICATION ON DISCLOSURE OF TUBERCULOSIS DIAGNOSIS AND ADHERENCE TO TREATMENT: SOCIAL REPRESENTATIONS OF PROFESSIONALS AND PATIENTS
Atuação da enfermeira eleva o controle de hipertensos e diminui o efeito do avental branco
Conicity index in people with hypertension followed in the Brazil’s Family Health Strategy
Blood pressure control of hypertensive patients followed in a high complexity clinic and associated variables
Factors associated with performing activities of daily living in women after suffering a stroke
Association between perceived racial discrimination and hypertension: findings from the ELSA-Brasil study
“Pardos” and blacks in Brazil and blacks in the USA are at greater risk of developing arterial hypertension than whites, and the causes of this inequality are still little understood. Psychosocial and contextual factors, including racial discrimination, are indicated as conditions associated with this inequality. The aim of this study was to identify the association between perceived racial discrimination and hypertension. The study evaluated 14,012 workers from the ELSA-Brazil baseline population. Perceived discrimination was measured by the Lifetime Major Events Scale, adapted to Portuguese. Classification by race/color followed the categories proposed by Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE). Hypertension was defined by standard criteria. The association between the compound variable - race/racial discrimination - and hypertension was estimated by Poisson regression with robust variance and stratified by the categories of body mass index (BMI) and sex. Choosing white women as the reference group, in the BMI 25kg/m2 and men in any BMI category, no effect of racial discrimination was identified. Despite the differences in point estimates of prevalence of hypertension between “pardo” women who reported and those who did not report discrimination, our results are insufficient to assert that an association exists between racial discrimination and hypertension
