A year ago
According to Dr. Efua Commeh, interim program manager for the Ghana Health Service's non-communicable diseases, Ghana is seeing an increase in stroke cases among young people 40 years of age and younger.
She said that recent increases in uncontrolled hypertension among the nation's youthful population contributed to the stroke cases.
According to Dr. Commeh, whereas stroke cases were previously mostly recorded in adults between the ages of 80 and 90, local hospitals are now documenting them in patients as young as 35 and 40, with the majority of them being caused by uncontrolled hypertension.
The productive labor group, or those who are actively employed, are now experiencing strokes, as opposed to the extremely elderly folks who we used to see them in.
"They take them to the hospital, where they report that the patient collapsed and nothing occurred." They have hypertension, which you check. "They get consequences like stroke, heart attacks, renal disorders, and others because of their hypertension," she continued.
Dr. Commeh described hypertension as a very important health issue facing the nation today, adding that hospitals were noticing an increase in the number of young individuals, sometimes as young as 20, presenting with the condition. He said that these figures, however, were not as significant as those among older age groups.
She said that on average, patients with hypertension make about 600,000 hospital visits every year across the nation.
In an interview before World Hypertension Day, which will be marked on May 17, she discussed the following subject: "Measure Your Blood Pressure Accurately, Control It, and Live Longer."
stroke origins
According to Dr. Commeh, stress was mostly to blame for the recent stroke instances among young people in the nation, and the majority of Ghana's youth were stressed out.
"For some of them, pressure from school, pressure from work, pressure from family, and pressure elsewhere; on top of these tensions, working long hours and arriving home late before supper
You won't find any suitable meals to consume at that hour of the night.
"You end up eating fast food, which, among other things, helps to make us unwell and is what might cause hypertension," the speaker said.
Other reasons for stroke in young people, according to her, include poor diets, drinking too much alcohol, smoking cigarettes, and not exercising enough. She also mentioned that these circumstances might elevate blood pressure and lead to hypertension.
"It's been stated that hypertension kills silently."
Because you don't notice anything as it starts to rise, it is dubbed "quiet."
The individual falls when you first notice a strong headache, at which point it would have been a little too late, the doctor explained.
She lamented the fact that few individuals in the nation, particularly young people, monitored their blood pressure, noting that for most people, the first time their blood pressure was tested was after they had collapsed.
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