1. The association of knowledge, attitudes and behaviors related to salt with 24-h urinary sodium, potassium excretion and hypertensive status
- Author
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Xiaofu, Du, Le, Fang, Jianwei, Xu, Xiangyu, Chen, Yamin, Bai, Jing, Wu, Lin, Wu, and Jieming, Zhong
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Multidisciplinary ,Sodium ,Blood Pressure ,Sodium Chloride ,Prehypertension ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Hypertension ,Potassium ,Humans ,Female ,Sodium Chloride, Dietary - Abstract
To understand the association between sodium and potassium consumption levels, hypertension and knowledge, attitudes and behaviors (KAB) toward salt and the commitment to effective sodium reduction and potassium supplementation to achieve the purpose of suppressing hypertension. A stratified multistage random sampling method was used to obtain a representative provincial sample of 7512 residents aged 18–69 years through a cross-sectional survey by the Salt Reduction and Hypertension Prevention Project (SRHPP) in Zhejiang Province of China in 2017–2018. A screening including demographic, anthropometric, salt-related KAB and physical measurements was implemented, and 24-h urine of approximately 1/5 of the participants was collected and tested. The mean age was 44.8 years, 50.1% were women, 44.0% lived in urban areas, and hypertension or prehypertension accounted for approximately 35.0%. The mean 24-h urinary sodium and potassium excretion were 3848.5 (1661.1) mg/d and 1491.1 (710.9) mg/d, respectively. KAB in urban areas was generally more favorable than in rural areas, women were better than men, and the optimal blood pressure group was better than the other two groups (P
- Published
- 2022
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