The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Singapore keeps to 140/90 measure for high blood pressure

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SINGAPORE: Singapore will not be adopting the new, stricter, high blood pressure definition of 130/80 that the American Heart Associatio­n has recommende­d.

It will continue to use the current 140/90 to indicate hypertensi­on. This is the value also used in Europe and Australia, a Health Ministry spokesman said.

She added: “Essentiall­y, while these new guidelines change the definition of hypertensi­on for US patients, they do not change the approach to management in a major way.”

This is because, despite the new cut-off, about 80 per cent of the newly defined hypertensi­ves do not require any medication, only lifestyle changes.

Based on the new definition, 46 per cent of Americans are now considered to be suffering from high blood pressure, up from 36 per cent.

The spokesman said the ministry will continue to review the evidence of the new AHA guidelines and how they apply to the local population.

Sheadded: “Blood pressureca­nbe kept in the healthy range by living a healthy lifestyle such as having a balanced diet, avoiding excess salt intake, having regular physical activity and not smoking.”

Dr Chin Chee Tang, a senior cardiologi­st at the National Heart Centre Singapore, said doctors have always known that the effects of blood pressure on health are a continuum, so thresholds for “normal” or “not normal” are not always useful.

He said: “The lower the blood pressure is, the lower the risk of adverse outcomes. This has to be tempered with the increased risk of potential side-effects of treatment.”

Dr Chin said the main advantage of the new US cut-off is it could “increase awareness of the dangers associated with high blood pressure, and hence an earlier drive for individual­s to optimise their blood pressure”.

But the downside of a lower threshold includes implicatio­ns for insurance coverage. It would also affect future research and treatments by making comparison­s more difficult, he said.

The 2010 National Health Survey found that 23.5 per cent of people in Singapore are hypertensi­ve, with one in four not being aware of it.

More than half the people aged 60 years and older have high blood pressure.

According to the World Health Organisati­on, raised blood pressure is responsibl­e for 7.5 million deaths a year, or almost 13 per cent of all deaths.

It is a major risk factor for heart diseases and stroke. People who are obese or diabetic are more likely to have hypertensi­on.

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