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      Incidence of hypertension in the Framingham Study.

      American Journal of Public Health
      Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antihypertensive Agents, therapeutic use, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Health Surveys, Humans, Hypertension, drug therapy, epidemiology, Male, Massachusetts, Middle Aged

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          Abstract

          Incidence and trends in incidence of definite hypertension were analyzed based on 30 years follow-up of 5,209 subjects in the Framingham Heart Study cohort. Based on pooling of 15 two-year periods, hypertension incidence per biennium increased with age in men from 3.3 per cent at ages 30-39 to 6.2 per cent at ages 70-79, and in women from 1.5 per cent at ages 30-39 to 8.6 per cent at ages 70-79. No consistent trend in incidence rates was evident for either sex from the 1950s through the 1970s. The proportion of hypertensive subjects receiving antihypertensive medication has increased since 1954-58 and exceeded 80 per cent for both men and women ages 60-89 years in 1979-81. Incidence data presented in this report may serve as a baseline for assessing the impact of future public health efforts in the primary prevention of hypertension.

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