1 / 39

presented by Trevor Ferguson on behalf of JHLS-III Investigators

Jamaica Health and Lifestyle Survey 2016 - 2017: Prevalence of NCD Risk Factors and Cardiovascular Disease. presented by Trevor Ferguson on behalf of JHLS-III Investigators. Introduction – NCDs and Public Health.

Download Presentation

presented by Trevor Ferguson on behalf of JHLS-III Investigators

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jamaica Health and Lifestyle Survey 2016 - 2017: Prevalence of NCD Risk Factors and Cardiovascular Disease presented by Trevor Ferguson on behalf of JHLS-III Investigators

  2. Introduction – NCDs and Public Health • Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), including heart disease, stroke, cancer, diabetes, and chronic lung disease remain a global public health problem • NCDs are responsible for 71% of deaths globally • In Jamaica, NCDs accounted for approximately 62% of deaths among men and 74% of deaths among women in 2016

  3. Introduction – NCDs and Public Health • Data from JHLS-II, completed in 2007-2008, showed high prevalence of behavioural and metabolic risk factors for NCDs • JHLS-III, conducted between 2016-2017, provides updated estimates on the burden of NCDs and their risk factors

  4. Content Covered • Obesity • Diabetes mellitus • Hypertension • High Cholesterol • Heart Attack • Stroke

  5. Study Design • A community based interviewer-administered health examination survey of non-institutionalised Jamaicans, resident in Jamaica, aged 15 years and older • Designed to be nationally representative • Multi-stage sampling design • Randomly selected rural and urban enumeration districts stratified by parish • Systematic sampling of households within each ED • One participant selected per household – using Kish method

  6. Weighted Analyses • Sampling weights – based on • Probability of selection of dwellings and enumeration districts • Adjusted for unit non-response • Calibrated using population distribution at parish-level sex-specific by 5-year age bands

  7. Weighted Estimates • More conservative estimates of the variability associated with the statistics • Description that can be generalised to Jamaican population of 15 years and older

  8. Recruitment

  9. The Recruited Sample • 1089 (38.8%) males, 1718 (61.2%) females

  10. RESULTS

  11. Distribution of Nutritional Status by Sex (BMI categories) 54% of persons ≥15 yrs were overweight (25% pre-obese; 29% obese) Pre-obese = BMI 25.0-29.9; Obese = BMI≥30 kg/m2 p<0.001 for male: female difference

  12. Pre-Obesity and Obesity by Age • High prevalence of overweight (pre-obesity and obesity) in all age groups • Lowest in 15-24 age group • Highest among those 35-44 & 45-54 years • Small decrease in the older age groups Pre-obese = BMI 25.0-29.9; Obese = BMI≥30 kg/m2

  13. Prevalence of obesity by sex(BMI ≥30 kg/m2) Marked sex difference in prevalence of obesity – female >> male

  14. Prevalence of Obesity (BMI ≥30) by Parish (Females) • Highest prevalence: Trelawny(58.0%) , St James (47.0%) , Kingston (46.1%) • Lowest prevalence: Manchester (32.2%), St Mary (34.5%), St Ann (36.6%)

  15. Prevalence of Obesity (BMI ≥30) by Parish (Males) p=0.064 • Highest prevalence: Hanover (22.9%) , St Catherine (22.0%), St Ann (19.5%) • Lowest prevalence: Westmoreland (2.0%), Portland (4.2%), St Thomas (7.6%)

  16. Prevalence Diabetes Mellitus(defined as FBS ≥ 7.0 mmol/l or on medication for diabetes) • Overall diabetes prevalence 11.9% (95%CI 10.5 - 13.4%) • Significantly higher prevalence among women 15% vs. 9% (p<0.001) • Prevalence among persons 15-74 years 10.2% (95% CI 8.9 - 11.7%) • Absolute increase of 2.3% compared to JHLS-II in 2008

  17. Prevalence of Diabetes Mellitus by Age P<0.001 for both males and females

  18. Prevalence of Diabetes by Parish (Females) Female (p=0.167) • Highest prevalence: Manchester (22%) , Westmoreland (21%), Trelawny (19%) • Lowest prevalence: St Mary (8%), St Ann (9%), Portland (12%)

  19. Prevalence of Diabetes by Parish (Males) Male (p=0.038) • Highest prevalence: Hanover (19%) , Clarendon (19%), Kingston (17%) • Lowest prevalence: St Thomas (2%), St Mary (4%), Trelawny (4%)

  20. Prevalence of Diabetes Mellitus by Rural / Urban Residence • No significant differences between rural and urban residents • 11.4% among rural vs. 12.3% among urban residents

  21. Pre-diabetes by Sex Prediabetes defined as fasting glucose of 5.6-6.9 mmol/l p<0.001 Overall 24% of persons 15 years or older have diabetes or prediabetes

  22. Definition & Classification of High BP JNC7 = The Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure 

  23. Prevalence of Hypertension by Sex using JNC-7 (2003) and ACC/AHA (2017) criteria JNC-7 (SBP ≥140 or DBP ≥90) ACC/AHA 2017 (SBP ≥130 or DBP ≥80) p=0.039 p=0.506

  24. Proportion of Population in Blood Pressure Categories (JNC-7 & ACC/AHA) Only 32% of Jamaican adults have normal blood pressure 2/3 of the population have elevated blood pressure

  25. Hypertension by Age and Sex (JNC7) P<0.001 for both males and females

  26. Hypertension – Rural vs Urban (JNC7) • No significant rural urban differences in the prevalence of HTN • 34.5% rural vs 33.1% urban

  27. Hypertension by Parish (JNC7) P=0.014 P=<0.001

  28. Prevalence of High Cholesterol(total cholesterol ≥5.2 mmol/l) • Estimated prevalence of high cholesterol = 18% • Higher in women compared to men 20% vs. 16%, p=0.024 Urban vs. Rural • Rural prevalence 20%; urban prevalence 16%; p=0.083 • Rural urban difference significant among females: 23% (rural) vs. 17% (urban); p=0.036

  29. Prevalence of High Cholesterol by Age P<0.001 for both males and females

  30. Hypertension and Diabetes by BMI Category BMI categories: <18.5 = underweight; 18-5-24.9 = normal weight; 25.0-29.9 = pre-obese; ≥30 = obese (units = kg/m2)

  31. Level of Awareness (%) for HTN & DM

  32. Treatment and Control (%) among Persons Aware of HTN, DM 1 Controlled calculated as proportion of those on treatment

  33. Prevalence of Heart Attack by Sex and Age • Overall prevalence of heart attack 0.4% (4.2 per 1000) • Prevalence is lower than 0.6% seen in 2008 • As expected no cases among persons <35; absence of cases in 45-54 probably due to chance given the small numbers

  34. Prevalence of Stroke by Sex and Age • Overall prevalence of stroke was 1.2% (10 per 1000) • Prevalence is slightly lower than 1.4% seen in 2008 • No cases among persons <25; high prevalence among persons ≥75 years

  35. Secular Trends among persons 15-74 years for 2001, 2008, 2017

  36. Summary / Key Findings • Prevalence of NCD risk factors remain high and appear to be increasing • More than half of the population is pre-obese/obese • 2/3 have elevated blood pressure • 1/8 have diabetes; ¼ had pre-diabetes or diabetes combined • Just under 1/5 have high cholesterol • 4/10 persons with HTN or DM unaware of their condition • Only 30% of treated persons with HTN or DM are controlled

  37. Implications • Jamaica will to continue to face challenges with complications of diabetes & hypertension, particularly heart disease, stroke & chronic kidney disease • Health care expenditure is likely to increase • May negatively impact economy due to reduced productivity among persons who are ill • Likely to see increase in dependency ratio due to more persons being unable to work

  38. Recommendations • Population wide intervention to reduce obesity, diabetes and hypertension • Jamaica Moves  programme - physical activity, healthy eating; promotion of age-appropriate health checks for NCDs and NCD awareness. • Improved socioeconomic circumstances and improved access to care • Population wide screening for hypertension, diabetes and high cholesterol to increase awareness and ensure persons are treated • Engagement of health care providers in both public and private sector to improve quality of care

  39. JHLS-III Research Team

More Related