The incidence of pregnancy hypertension in India, Pakistan, Mozambique, and Nigeria: A prospective population-level analysis

Most pregnancy hypertension estimates in less-developed countries are from cross-sectional hospital surveys and are considered overestimates. We estimated population-based rates by standardised methods in 27 intervention clusters of the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) cluster...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLoS medicine 2019-04, Vol.16 (4), p.e1002783-e1002783
Hauptverfasser: Magee, Laura A, Sharma, Sumedha, Nathan, Hannah L, Adetoro, Olalekan O, Bellad, Mrutynjaya B, Goudar, Shivaprasad, Macuacua, Salécio E, Mallapur, Ashalata, Qureshi, Rahat, Sevene, Esperança, Sotunsa, John, Valá, Anifa, Lee, Tang, Payne, Beth A, Vidler, Marianne, Shennan, Andrew H, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A, von Dadelszen, Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most pregnancy hypertension estimates in less-developed countries are from cross-sectional hospital surveys and are considered overestimates. We estimated population-based rates by standardised methods in 27 intervention clusters of the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) cluster randomised trials. CLIP-eligible pregnant women identified in their homes or local primary health centres (2013-2017). Included here are women who had delivered by trial end and received a visit from a community health worker trained to provide supplementary hypertension-oriented care, including standardised blood pressure (BP) measurement. Hypertension (BP ≥ 140/90 mm Hg) was defined as chronic (first detected at
ISSN:1549-1676
1549-1277
1549-1676
DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.1002783