Unhealthy Lifestyle and the Prevalence of High Blood Pressure Among Early Adults: a Cross-Sectional Study

Authors

  • Andri Setiya Wahyudi Faculty of Nursing Universitas Airlangga Surabaya Indonesia Author
  • Faizah Maulidiyah Faculty of Nursing Universitas Airlangga Surabaya Indonesia Author
  • Ira Suarilah Faculty of Nursing Universitas Airlangga Surabaya Indonesia Author
  • Tintin Sukartini Faculty of Nursing Universitas Airlangga Surabaya Indonesia Author
  • Ika Nur Pratiwi Faculty of Nursing Universitas Airlangga Surabaya Indonesia Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61841/trnjgg45

Keywords:

risks of hypertension, unhealthy life-style, early-adult, blood pressure

Abstract

Younger people with an unhealthy lifestyle have been predicted to have factors related to the risk of hypertension. To determine the factors that contribute to the risk of hypertension in early adults, a cross-sectional descriptive correlational study was conducted from 393 of eligible early adults by cluster sampling techniques. The independent variables were nutrients, sleep, smoking, and anxiety. The dependent variable was blood pressure. The nutrient was measured by BMI, sleep was assessed by the quantity of sleep in hours per day, smoking was measured by the Global Tobacco Surveillance System (GTTS), and Hamilton Rating Scale for Anxiety (HARS) was used to measure anxiety. The contributing factors were analyzed by chi square with α ≤ .05. 58.27% of participants experiencing obesity, 45.30% less sleep, 66.41% smoked in moderate levels, 56.49% of them expressed anxiety, and 60.05% showed high blood pressure. The association between all variable and blood pressure were: nutrients (p =

<.0001, OR = 1.299), sleep (p = .041, OR = 1.527), smoking (p = .025, OR = .622), anxiety (p = .026 OR = 1.585).

Nutrition (BMI), sleep hours, smoking, and anxiety have a significant relationship with the risk of hypertension. Nutrients, sleeping, smoking, and anxiety contributed to high blood pressure among the early adult population. A further longitudinal study is suggested to examine the trajectory associated with the prevalence of high blood pressure among early adults.

 

 

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Published

30.09.2020

How to Cite

Wahyudi, A. S., Maulidiyah, F., Suarilah, I., Sukartini, T., & Pratiwi, I. N. (2020). Unhealthy Lifestyle and the Prevalence of High Blood Pressure Among Early Adults: a Cross-Sectional Study. International Journal of Psychosocial Rehabilitation, 24(7), 8923-8931. https://doi.org/10.61841/trnjgg45