Study of Risk factors of Coronary Heart Disease in Urban Slums of Patna

Authors

  • Rashmi Singh Professor, Department of Community Medicine, Patna Medical College, Patna
  • Madhumita Mukherjee Tutor, Department of Community Medicine, Patna Medical College, Patna
  • Rajeev Kumar Department of Community Medicine, Patna Medical College, Patna
  • Ritu Singh Field Investigator, Department of Community Medicine, Patna Medical College, Patna
  • Ranabir Pal Professor, Department of Community Medicine, Sikkim Manipal Institute of Medical Sciences, 5thMile, Tadong, Gangtok, Sikkim

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/nje.v2i3.6902

Keywords:

Coronary Heart Diseases, urban slums, risk factors

Abstract

Background

Coronary Heart Diseases (CHDs) are imminent cause of disability and death with economic adverse effects in the disadvantaged population in India.

Materials and Methods

This population based study was conducted from 1st December 2010 till 31st May 2011 among the adults in the slums of Patna to assess the magnitude and risk factors of CHDs concerning age, sex, tobacco use, alcohol consumption, physical activity, weight, height, waist circumference, blood pressure and random capillary blood glucose (RCBG).

Results

Among 3118 participants 16.36 percent (males 18.79 %, females 14.48 %) were hypertensive; 26.3 percent (males 25.94 %, females 26.58 %) had elevated RCBG; 4.46 percent were Diabetic. High body mass index (BMI), waist circumference (WC) and waist to height ratio (WHtR) was noted in 31.94 percent (males 31.83%, females 32.03%), 50.45 percent (males 39.1%, females 59.17%), 86.53 percent (male 83.12%, female 89.15%) respectively; tobacco users were 12.54 percent, while 9.14 percent reported alcohol consumption; 33.64 percent were sedentary (males 30.55%, females 37.65%). BMI, WC, WHtR, tobacco use, alcohol consumption and physical inactivity were significantly associated with hypertension (p < 0.05). Elevated RCBG was significantly associated with increased BMI, WC, WHtR. Multivariate logistic regression revealed that BMI, WHtR and alcohol were associated with hypertension, not with elevated RCBG.

Conclusion

Our study indicated that CHDs and their risk factors are not only limited to affluent societies but also affect the underprivileged mass. Preventive care and multipronged intervention including extensive behavior change communication needs to be organized to reduce the risk of CHDs in urban poor.

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/nje.v2i3.6902

Nepal Journal of Epidemiology 2012;2(3): 205-12

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Author Biography

Ranabir Pal, Professor, Department of Community Medicine, Sikkim Manipal Institute of Medical Sciences, 5thMile, Tadong, Gangtok, Sikkim

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Published

2012-09-30

How to Cite

Singh, R., Mukherjee, M., Kumar, R., Singh, R., & Pal, R. (2012). Study of Risk factors of Coronary Heart Disease in Urban Slums of Patna. Nepal Journal of Epidemiology, 2(3), 205–12. https://doi.org/10.3126/nje.v2i3.6902

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Section

Original Articles