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Hypertension, Vol 19, 237-241, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
R Stamler, M Shipley, P Elliott, A Dyer, S Sans and J Stamler
An inverse association between social class and disease has frequently been
reported; education, an indicator of social class, was negatively related
to blood pressure in several studies. Reasons are not clear. INTERSALT, an
international study on electrolytes and blood pressure, obtained data on
years of education for 10,079 adults in 52 centers in 32 countries. Data
presented here are for 47 centers, omitting five where the population in
the sample had no education or no differences in educational level.
Regression coefficients were calculated for the education-blood pressure
association in each center. An inverse association was found for men in 28
centers and for women in 38. Center coefficients were combined to give a
studywide estimate of that association. When adjusted only for age,
systolic pressure in men was 1.3 mm Hg higher for 10 fewer years of
education (p less than 0.05) and for women 4.5 mm Hg higher (p less than
0.001). However, when adjusted also for five lifestyle factors (24-hour
sodium and potassium excretion, body mass index, alcohol intake, and
smoking), these estimates were reduced by about one half, and the inverse
association was no longer significant for men. Similar findings were
obtained for diastolic pressure. Those with less education had on average
higher sodium excretion, lower potassium excretion, greater body mass, and
higher alcohol intake, all factors tending to increase blood pressure.
Improvement of these factors, which help explain the differences in blood
pressure related to years of education, has the potential to reduce the
blood pressure disadvantage associated with lower socioeconomic status.
ARTICLES
Higher blood pressure in adults with less education. Some explanations from INTERSALT
Department of Community Health and Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL 60611.
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