K Steyn

University of Cape Town, Cape Town, Province of the Western Cape, South Africa

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Publications (80)170.91 Total impact

  • Article: G-protein-coupled receptor kinase 4 polymorphisms predict blood pressure response to dietary modification in Black patients with mild-to-moderate hypertension.
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    ABSTRACT: Dopamine via G-protein-coupled receptor kinase 4 (GRK-4) regulates sodium (Na) balance in the proximal tubule of the kidney. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms of GRK-4 have been linked to impaired natriuresis and salt-sensitive hypertension. The purpose of this report was to determine the effect of GRK-4 gene polymorphisms on the blood pressure (BP) responses to dietary intervention. Black subjects aged 50-75 years with mild-to-moderate hypertension were randomised to an 8-week dietary intervention (n=40) or standard diet (n=40). BP was measured at baseline and at 8 weeks using 24-h ambulatory BP. All subjects underwent DNA analysis for the R65L and A142V polymorphisms. Data were analysed using generalised linear models. For the whole group, between-diet differences in mean 24-h ambulatory systolic BP was -4.53 mm Hg (95% confidence interval -9.05 to -0.01, P=0.05). In the intervention arm, the combined CC and CT group of the A142V showed a significant reduction in both systolic and diastolic ambulatory BP (-10 mm Hg, P=0.023 and -6.5 mm Hg, P=0.01, respectively), whereas the TT group demonstrated no reduction. Similarly, the combined GG and GT groups of the R65L showed a significant reduction in ambulatory BP (-10.6 mm Hg for systolic, P=0.004 and 5.8 mm Hg for diastolic, P=0.006). There was no response in the TT group. GRK-4 polymorphisms predict BP response to dietary modification in Black subjects with mild-to-moderate hypertension. These data may provide at least one among a range of clinical tools to target selected hypertensives to dietary intervention.
    Journal of human hypertension 05/2011; 26(5):334-9. · 2.80 Impact Factor
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    Article: Wheeze, asthma diagnosis and medication use: a national adult survey in a developing country.
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    ABSTRACT: As relatively little is known about adult wheeze and asthma in developing countries, this study aimed to determine the predictors of wheeze, asthma diagnosis, and current treatment in a national survey of South African adults. A stratified national probability sample of households was drawn and all adults (>14 years) in the selected households were interviewed. Outcomes of interest were recent wheeze, asthma diagnosis, and current use of asthma medication. Predictors of interest were sex, age, household asset index, education, racial group, urban residence, medical insurance, domestic exposure to smoky fuels, occupational exposure, smoking, body mass index, and past tuberculosis. A total of 5671 men and 8155 women were studied. Although recent wheeze was reported by 14.4% of men and 17.6% of women and asthma diagnosis by 3.7% of men and 3.8% of women, women were less likely than men to be on current treatment (OR 0.6; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.5 to 0.8). A history of tuberculosis was an independent predictor of both recent wheeze (OR 3.4; 95% CI 2.5 to 4.7) and asthma diagnosis (OR 2.2; 95% CI 1.5 to 3.2), as was occupational exposure (wheeze: OR 1.8; 95% CI 1.5 to 2.0; asthma diagnosis: OR 1.9; 95% CI 1.4 to 2.4). Smoking was associated with wheeze but not asthma diagnosis. Obesity showed an association with wheeze only in younger women. Both wheeze and asthma diagnosis were more prevalent in those with less education but had no association with the asset index. Independently, having medical insurance was associated with a higher prevalence of diagnosis. Some of the findings may be to due to reporting bias and heterogeneity of the categories wheeze and asthma diagnosis, which may overlap with post tuberculous airways obstruction and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease due to smoking and occupational exposures. The results underline the importance of controlling tuberculosis and occupational exposures as well as smoking in reducing chronic respiratory morbidity. Validation of the asthma questionnaire in this setting and research into the pathophysiology of post tuberculous airways obstruction are also needed.
    Thorax 11/2005; 60(11):895-901. · 6.84 Impact Factor
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    Article: Doctors' attitudes and practices regarding smoking cessation during pregnancy.
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    ABSTRACT: To investigate the current smoking cessation practices and attitudes of doctors working in the public antenatal services, as well as their perceived barriers to addressing the issue in the context of routine care. The study was qualitative, consisting of 14 semistructured, one-to-one interviews with doctors purposefully sampled from 5 public sector hospitals in Cape Town, South Africa. The doctors in this study regarded HIV, poor nutrition, alcohol abuse and psychosocial stress as equal or higher risks to pregnant women than smoking. They tended to underestimate the magnitude of the risk of smoking during pregnancy. Doctors were unaware of the guidelines offering clinicians brief, structured approaches to smoking cessation counselling and were generally pessimistic that they could influence the smoking behaviour of pregnant women, especially poor, disadvantaged women who face multiple barriers to achieving health-enhancing behaviour. However, most doctors were concerned about improving their communication with pregnant women about smoking and open to adopting new approaches or tools that could assist them. Perceived barriers to providing smoking cessation interventions included a lack of counselling skills and educational resources, other pressing priorities, too little time, and the levels of stress currently experienced by doctors and midwives working in public sector hospitals as a result of dramatic staff and budget cuts. The study suggests that doctors working in the public sector antenatal services are not routinely addressing the issue of smoking during pregnancy or using effective methods to assist women to give up smoking. Doctors need convincing that smoking cessation interventions can be effective. The promotion and provision of evidence-based guidelines such as the Clinical Practice Guideline for Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence (Fiore, 2000), with minimal training, is a possible strategy for integrating smoking cessation interventions into routine antenatal care in South Africa.
    South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde 06/2005; 95(5):350-4. · 2.04 Impact Factor
  • Article: Predictors of chronic bronchitis in South African adults.
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    ABSTRACT: National household survey of adults in South Africa, a middle income country. To determine the prevalence and predictors of chronic bronchitis. A stratified national probability sample of households was selected. All adults in the selected households were interviewed. Chronic bronchitis was defined as chronic productive cough. Socio-demographic predictors were wealth, education, race, age and urban residence. Personal and exposure variables included history of tuberculosis, domestic exposure to smoky fuels, occupational exposures, smoking and body mass index. The overall prevalence of chronic bronchitis was 2.3% in men and 2.8% in women. The strongest predictor of chronic bronchitis was a history of tuberculosis (men, odds ratio [OR] 4.9; 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.6-9.2; women, OR 6.6; 95%CI 3.7-11.9). Other risk factors were smoking, occupational exposure (in men), domestic exposure to smoky fuel (in women) and (in univariate analysis only) being underweight. Wealth and particularly education were protective. The pattern of chronic bronchitis in South Africa suggests a combination of risk factors that includes not only smoking but also tuberculosis, occupational exposures in men and domestic fuel exposure in women. Control of these risk factors requires public health action across a broad front. The protective role of education requires elucidation.
    The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease: the official journal of the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease 04/2004; 8(3):369-76. · 2.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Allelic variation in the promoter region of the LDL receptor gene: analysis of an African-specific variant in the FP2 cis-acting regulatory element.
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    ABSTRACT: DNA samples of 2303 individuals from nine different population groups were screened for variant -175g-->t in the promoter region of the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) gene. The -175g-->t variant detected at carrier frequencies of 3-10% in different African population groups was absent in the Caucasian and Asian (Chinese) individuals studied. In contrast to previous findings in Black South Africans where this polymorphism predominated in patients with familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH), it occurred at a significantly lower frequency in hypercholesterolaemics from the recently admixed Coloured population of South Africa compared with population-matched controls (P<0.0001). Haplotype and mutation analysis excluded the likelihood that this finding is due to association with a specific disease-related mutation in FH patients, although reversal of the positive association with FH observed in the Black population may, at least in part, be due to admixture linkage disequilibrium. Transient transfection studies in HepG2 cells demonstrated that the -175t allele is associated with a non-significant decrease ( approximately 7%) of LDLR transcription in the absence of sterols. The data presented in this study raise the possibility that the -175g-->t polymorphism may have subtle effects that become clinically important within certain genetic and/or environmental contexts.
    Molecular and Cellular Probes 08/2003; 17(4):175-81. · 2.08 Impact Factor
  • Article: Perceptions of oral health: the South African Demographic and Health Survey of 1998.
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    ABSTRACT: Oral diseases are widespread in South Africa and affect large numbers of people in terms of pain, tooth loss, disfigurement, loss of function and even death. The majority of South Africans have no access to private services and are dependent on the government for oral health care services, but less than 10% of the population utilises public oral health services. This underutilisation is due to limited resources and inaccessibility. This article reports on the data collected on adults, 15 years and older, from the South African Demographic and Health Survey carried out in 1998, relating to perceptions of oral health. The questions dealt with oral health problems, utilisation of oral health services, loss of natural teeth, oral health practices and knowledge of water fluoridation. The results are discussed in terms of age, gender, education, place of residence, province and classification according to the previous population registration act. A high proportion (36%) of people had experienced oral health problems. Teeth problems were most commonly reported in the higher age groups, non-urban areas, Eastern Cape, Northern Cape and Free State, people with little education and those classified as non-urban Africans. Significant differences were found in regard to periodontal disease, tooth loss, knowledge of fluoride between groups according to age, geographic location, race and level of education. 62% of the respondents reported that they had lost some of their natural teeth and in some communities almost a third of the respondents were edentulous. In comparing the goals of the current draft national oral health policy with the findings of this survey the following implications for policy development should be noted: A higher priority needs to be given to oral health issues; Improve access by increasing primary health care facilities through the delivery of oral health care services; The high prevalence of hepatitis and HIV/AIDS infection poses a higher risk to oral health personnel and the public and The successful implementation of water fluoridation depends upon public knowledge, understanding and support.
    SADJ: journal of the South African Dental Association = tydskrif van die Suid-Afrikaanse Tandheelkundige Vereniging 12/2001; 56(11):505-10.
  • Article: Hypertension in South African adults: results from the Demographic and Health Survey, 1998.
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    ABSTRACT: To determine the prevalence and treatment status of hypertension in South Africa. National cross-sectional survey. 13 802 randomly selected South Africans, 15 years and older, were visited in their homes in 1998. Trained fieldworkers completed questionnaires on lifestyle and chronic diseases, measured blood pressure with an Omron manometer and recorded chronic drug utilization. Drugs were classified using the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical index. The mean systolic blood pressure for men and women was 123 mmHg (SE 0.37) and 119 mmHg (SE 0.36), while the mean diastolic level was 76 mmHg (SE 0.25) and 75 mmHg (SE 0.20), respectively. When using a cut-off point of 140/90 mmHg the hypertension prevalence rate (age-adjusted to the South African Population, Census 1996) was 21% for both genders. Using the current cut-off point (160/95 mmHg) for South Africa, the prevalence rate was 11% for men and 14% for women. For men with hypertension, the level of awareness, taking antihypertensive medication and having controlled blood pressure (< 160/95 mmHg) were 41, 39 and 26% respectively, while for women these rates were 67, 55 and 38% respectively. This survey revealed high levels of hypertension in the South African community with inadequate treatment status.
    Journal of Hypertension 10/2001; 19(10):1717-25. · 4.02 Impact Factor
  • Article: Role of physical activity for health in communities undergoing epidemiological transition.
    World review of nutrition and dietetics 02/2001; 90:110-26.
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    Article: Poor nutritional status in older black South Africans.
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    ABSTRACT: A cross-sectional analytical study was undertaken to describe the nutritional status and dietary intake of the elderly black population of Cape Town. A stratified proportional sample of 148 men and women aged 60 years and older (mean = 68.9+/-5.7) was selected from informal and formal peri-urban settlements. The study population was predominantly urbanized, although most subjects had migrated from non-urban areas. Trained fieldworkers conducted a 24-h recall dietary assessment and performed anthropometrical measurements. Mean energy intakes fell below the recommended dietary allowance (RDA) for both men and women; 27% and 36% of men and women, respectively, had energy intakes <67% RDA. Total fat intake was low and contributed 24-26% total energy. Mean dietary fibre intake was low at 11-16 g/day. Mean intakes fell below the RDA for vitamin D, calcium, zinc and vitamin B6. Less than two and a half servings per day were consumed from the vegetable and fruit group and less than one serving per day from the calcium-rich food group. Over half (51.3%) of the women and 18% of the male were obese (body mass index > or =30). We concluded that older black subjects in Cape Town have energy profiles in line with prudent dietary guidelines and more favorable than other elderly groups in the country, with regard to atherogenic risk. However, micronutrient and dietary fiber intake is inadequate, largely due to low reported energy intakes, particularly in women.
    Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition 01/2001; 10(1):31-8. · 1.13 Impact Factor
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    Article: The epidemic of obesity in South Africa: a study in a disadvantaged community.
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    ABSTRACT: The objective of this study was: 1) to determine the anthropometric profile of adults in Mamre, a small town in South Africa, which has a population of mixed ancestry ("colored" people of Afro-Euro-Malay-Khoisan ancestry); and 2) to determine the change in this profile between 1989 and 1996. Cross-sectional surveys conducted in random samples of adults in 1989 and 1996. The subjects were 684 women and 529 men in 1989, and 546 women and 430 men in 1996, aged 15 and older. The following measurements were recorded: height, weight, and circumference of waist, hips, and mid-upper arm. Based on data from the 1996 survey, 32% of women are obese (body mass index [BMI] > or = 30) at ages 25-44 years, rising to 49% at ages 45-64 years. A much lower prevalence of obesity is seen in men: 14% at ages 35-64 years. Obesity levels significantly increased in women between the two surveys (P=.015): up from 44% in 1989 to 49% in 1996 at ages 45-64 years. There was an increase in the prevalence of overweight (BMI 25-29.9) in men, though not in obesity. Mean BMI increased by about 3% in women and 2% in men between 1989 and 1996. This study conducted among people of mixed ancestry living in a disadvantaged community in South Africa shows that half of middle-aged women are obese. A rising trend in BMI was seen in adults of both sexes between 1989 and 1996. This trend may be explained by factors associated with rural-urban transition, including electrification, reduced physical activity, and increasing availability of energy-dense food.
    Ethnicity & disease 01/2001; 11(3):431-7. · 0.90 Impact Factor
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    Article: Ambivalence of primary health care professionals towards the South African guidelines for hypertension and diabetes.
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    ABSTRACT: Consensus-derived guidelines for hypertension and diabetes management were introduced by the National Department of Health to improve quality of care. However, the incorporation of guidelines into clinical practice is largely dependent on the attitudes of health professionals. To audit the responses and examine the attitudes of health professionals in primary care towards the diabetes and hypertension care guidelines. Qualitative focus group, in-depth discussions and clinic observations. Four community health centres (CHCs) in the Western Cape. Fifteen doctors and 10 professional nurses. The responses of health professionals to the guidelines were audited. Their attitudes were evaluated at a single pilot CHC using focus group discussions and in-depth interviews. Semi-structured interviews based on these themes were conducted at 3 other CHCs. Clinic consultations were observed to validate the responses. The guidelines were not systematically implemented at local CHCs and individual doctors consulted the guidelines infrequently. Several themes were identified as barriers to the application of the guidelines, including the consultation process by which the guidelines were developed, time constraints, scepticism about durability of the guidelines, conflict with local practices, health system problems, and patient beliefs. The usefulness of passive dissemination of guidelines to health professionals in primary care should be reviewed as several attitudinal barriers to implementation may exist. Guidelines may be adopted more readily if these barriers are addressed.
    South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde 01/2001; 90(12):1206-11. · 2.04 Impact Factor
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    Article: Cardiovascular disease risk factors in 5-year-old urban South African children--the Birth to Ten Study.
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    ABSTRACT: A birth cohort study, the Birth to Ten (BTT) study, commenced in the greater Johannesburg/Soweto metropole in South Africa in 1990. The overall BTT project collected antenatal, birth and early development information on these children as well as information that could help identify factors related to the emergence of risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) in children. To determine CVD risk profiles and their determinants in 5-year-old children living in an urban environment in South Africa. Demographic and birth characteristics were collected on a sample of 964 5-year-olds whose parents agreed for blood samples to be taken from their children. The children's height and weight were measured using standardised procedures; blood pressure (BP) was measured with a Dinamap Vital Signs Monitor, and a non-fasting blood sample was drawn for lipid determinations. Information on exposure to tobacco smoke and additional health-related data were obtained by interview. No differences were found between the birth weight and gestational age of the 5-year-old CVD participants and the remainder of the children studied at birth. The systolic BP was significantly different between ethnic groups, with the BP of the black children significantly higher than that of the Indian and white children, while the diastolic BP of black children was also the highest. White children had the highest mean total cholesterol (TC) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLC) levels, significantly higher than those in the black community. The coloured children's TC level was also significantly lower than that of the whites, while the LDLC level of the Indian children was significantly higher than that of the blacks. Overall, 64% of the children were exposed to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), with the white group having the lowest rate (45% exposed to ETS). The coloured children were most frequently exposed to ETS, with 40.6% having primary caregivers who smoked; of these children 42% lived in homes with two or more smokers. Tobacco control legislation will protect South Africans against tobacco sales promotions. This will be the first step towards increasing the priority of chronic disease prevention, health promotion and appropriate care for chronic diseases and their risk factors on the South African health policy agenda. The groups of children that were studied carried differing but significant levels of CVD risk. This suggests that the promotion of a healthy lifestyle should start in childhood, and should target the risk factors found in each group.
    South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde 08/2000; 90(7):719-26. · 2.04 Impact Factor
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    Article: A structured record to implement the national guidelines for diabetes and hypertension care.
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    ABSTRACT: Guidelines to improve standards of care for hypertension and diabetes were disseminated by the National Department of Health in 1996 but have generally not been implemented by health professional in local primary care. A strategy for the adoption and implementation of the Guidelines was developed in collaboration with health professionals in primary care. The development of a structured record, with prompts for the management of diabetes and hypertension according to the Guidelines. Three community health centres (CHCs) in the Western Cape. Doctors and nurses managing patients with diabetes and hypertension. A draft of the structured record was developed at a single-pilot CHC in the Western Cape. Focus group discussions established the core requirements for a structured record. Process, result and structural indicators in line with the national Guidelines were considered for inclusion in the draft record. This draft record was then piloted at two other CHCs. Comments from semi-structured interviews and pre- and post-test evaluation questionnaires were used to compile the final instrument. Eleven doctors and 8 nurses participated in the development of the final instrument. Important considerations in the design were a single-page, user-friendly format, tick-boxes to reduce writing, prompts, provision for sequential recording, target setting, and compatibility with the Guidelines. The final instrument was piloted and elicited a favourable overall response. The structured record simplifies the application of the Guidelines and the systematic recording of processes of care. The effectiveness of the Guidelines will be evaluated further in a randomised control trial using the structured record.
    South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde 02/2000; 90(1):53-6. · 2.04 Impact Factor
  • Article: Modifiable risk factors for Type 2 diabetes mellitus in a peri-urban community in South Africa.
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    ABSTRACT: To investigate the prevalence of Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) and its risk factors in a working class peri-urban community in South Africa. A cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted in 1996, where all persons aged 15 years and older, who were resident in randomly selected houses in Mamre, 55 km from the centre of Cape Town, were sampled. Subjects underwent a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test. Socio-demographic and anthropometric data were obtained and physical activity was assessed using a 7-day activity recall questionnaire. The 1985 WHO criteria were used to define diabetes. The response rate was 64.5% (n = 974). The participants comprised 56% women, 44% men, mean age 37.6 (range 15-86) years. The crude prevalence of Type 2 DM was 7.1% and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) 8.0%. The age-adjusted prevalence of Type 2 DM was 10.8% (95% confidence interval (CI) 8.2-13.5%) and IGT 10.2% (95% CI 7.7-12.8%). Regression analysis indicated that age (risk ratio (RR) 7.40, 95% CI 3.45-15.86), waist circumference (RR 4.53, 95% CI 2.04-10.05), low total energy expenditure (RR 1.75, 95% CI 1.07-2.56) and family history of diabetes (RR 2.31, 95% CI 1.42-3.77) were independent risk factors for Type 2 DM, while sex, obesity and regular alcohol consumption were not. This previously unstudied community has an intermediate prevalence on the international scale of Type 2 DM, which is linked to potentially modifiable risk factors.
    Diabetic Medicine 12/1999; 16(11):946-50. · 2.90 Impact Factor
  • Article: Blood pressure and social support observations from Mamre, South Africa, during social and political transition.
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    ABSTRACT: Social support, by moderating cardiovascular reactivity, has been demonstrated to attenuate the effects of stress on blood pressure in American communities. This is the first report to examine the relationship between social support and blood pressure in a South African context, during a period of infrastructure modernisation and political change. A total of 1240 residents (542 men, 698 women) of mixed ethnic origin, older than 14 years and stratified by age and sex, participated in a survey to determine risk factors for hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. Social support was assessed by a questionnaire developed in consultation with the community. It was defined by interactions that may threaten family harmony (score 1) and by networking between relatives, friends, colleagues and neighbours (score 2). Mean blood pressure of the sample was 130/79 mm Hg (s.d. 25/14 mm Hg). Hypertension prevalence was 26.9%. Only 36% of women compared to 57.3% of men (P < 0.0001) were employed. More women (29%) than men (22%) reported threats to family harmony, but social support networks were similarly perceived by both sexes. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure correlated weakly with score 1 (r = 0.096, P < 0.0007) but no association was observed with score 2. Score 1 was not associated with blood pressure by multiple regression analysis, that included confounding by age, sex, BMI, alcohol consumption and smoking status. Neither threats to family harmony nor networking between relatives, friends or neighbours, significantly influences blood pressure in this community. Measures of social support thought to moderate blood pressure may have limited cross-cultural application. Attitudinal changes during socio-political transition may impact on the generalisability of instruments for measurement.
    Journal of Human Hypertension 11/1999; 13(10):689-93. · 2.80 Impact Factor
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    Article: An inverse relation between blood pressure and birth weight among 5 year old children from Soweto, South Africa.
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    ABSTRACT: To examine the relation between birth weight and blood pressure at 5 years in a cohort of South African children. Prospective cohort study. 849 five year old children. Soweto, a sprawling urban area close to Johannesburg, South Africa, which was a designated residential area for people classified as "black" under apartheid legislation. Systolic blood pressure at 5 years was inversely related to birthweight (r = -0.05, p = 0.0007), independent of current weight, height, gestational age, maternal age or socioeconomic status at 5 years. There was no relation between birth weight and diastolic blood pressure. After adjusting for current weight and height, there was a mean decline in systolic blood pressure of 3.4 mm Hg (95% confidence intervals 1.4, 5.3 mm Hg) for every 1000 g increase in birth weight. These data from a disadvantaged urbanised community in Southern Africa extend the reported observations of an inverse relation between birth weight and systolic blood pressure. The study adds to the evidence that influences in fetal life and early childhood influence systolic blood pressure. Further research is required to assess whether efforts to reduce the incidence of low birthweight babies will attenuate the prevalence of hypertension in future generations.
    Journal of Epidemiology &amp Community Health 06/1999; 53(5):264-8. · 3.19 Impact Factor
  • Article: Physical Activity Is A Modifiable Risk Factor in A Peri-Urban Community in South Africa
    Medicine &amp Science in Sports &amp Exercise 04/1999; 31(5):S213. · 4.43 Impact Factor
  • Article: Treatment status and experiences of hypertension patients at a large health center in Cape Town.
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    ABSTRACT: This study was undertaken at a community health center (CHC) in the Cape Peninsula in order to assess the treatment status, knowledge and experiences of hypertensive patients. In addition, a health indicator sheet for hypertension was evaluated and an attempt was made to identify predictors of blood pressure (BP) control at this clinic. Two hundred two hypertensive patients were selected by interviewing the first available hypertensive patients. The patients' BP was measured electronically and by sphygmomanometer, and was compared to that recorded by the clinician on their clinic folders; heights and weights were also determined. Of the hypertensives, 41.6% had a BP above 160/95 mm Hg and only 42.1% had a BP below 140/90 mm Hg. Patients had little knowledge of either the consequences of hypertension or the actions needed to ensure that complications were prevented; 31% suggested home remedies for hypertension. The majority of the patients were satisfied with the service they received, but 47% complained about long waiting times, 37% felt that the doctor did not examine them adequately, and 15.5% reported that insufficient medication was provided when filling prescriptions. Urine and eye tests had been conducted infrequently during the previous two years. Thirty percent of the patients requested the return of the dedicated hypertension clubs. Conditional logistic regression models identified that patients who expressed the need to make proposals to the clinic staff about their care had better BP control than those who did not. The BP of hypertensive patients is not optimally controlled at this CHC and both non-drug and drug management of hypertension need to be improved. Steps should be taken to help hypertensive patients become more knowledgeable so that they may play more active and compliant roles in their hypertension care. Patients also suggested that dedicated hypertension clubs be reinstituted at the CHCs.
    Ethnicity & disease 02/1999; 9(3):441-50. · 0.90 Impact Factor
  • Article: Hypertension management of medical aid patients attending private practices.
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    ABSTRACT: The study aimed to describe the treatment status of hypertensive patients and the prescribing patterns of private medical practitioners treating medical aid scheme patients with hypertension. Data on hypertensive patients belonging to medical aid schemes were provided to the drug utilisation review consultancy, Quality Health Services (QHS), by private medical practitioners. The data were computerised and included the age and gender of the patient, the diastolic and systolic blood pressure (BP), the medication prescribed for the condition and the qualifications of the reporting doctor. All the prescribed drugs were categorised into 12 drug classes and combination preparations had each constituent categorised. The level of BP allowed the degree of BP control to be described as controlled (< 140/90 mmHg), borderline (140/90-< 160/95 mmHg) and uncontrolled (> or = 160/95 mmHg). Included in the study were 11,696 hypertensive patients (46.3% male and 53.7% female) and the 3,503 doctors who cared for them. The systolic BP showed an age-related increase, but the diastolic BP did not. The level of BP control was high, with less than a quarter of patients having uncontrolled hypertension. The most frequently prescribed drug class was angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors (32.2%). Beta-blockers accounted for 20.8% and calcium antagonists for 14% of all prescriptions. Thiazide and thiazide-like diuretics on their own accounted for only 7.8% of prescriptions. However, a further 13.8% of prescriptions contained this class of diuretics in combination with other drug classes. Diuretics of all classes taken on their own or in combination were used by 33.9% of patients. Good levels of hypertension control were reported for hypertensive patients by their private practitioners. Almost half of all prescriptions were for the newer and more costly antihypertensive drugs (ACE inhibitors and calcium antagonists), although their effectiveness in reducing long-term complications of hypertension is still unproven. Furthermore, these prescribing patterns do not conform to those recommended by the Southern African Hypertension Society's hypertension management guidelines.
    South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde 02/1999; 89(2):160-4. · 2.04 Impact Factor
  • Article: Detection and measurement of hypercholesterolaemia in South Africans attending general practitioners in private practice--the cholesterol monitor.
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    ABSTRACT: This paper reports data on the detection and management of hypercholesterolaemia in patients attending general practitioners in private practice in South Africa. The frequency of cholesterol testing and the level at which active therapeutic intervention occurred at medical practices were monitored over a 2-year period. A sample of 200 medical practitioners was selected from private practices in major cities. Data on patients seen by the selected doctors during a 5-day monitoring period were recorded on a standardised form. 12,842 patients were seen by the 200 private practice GPs. More men (18.7%) than women (10.4%) had coronary heart disease (CHD), and their mean total cholesterol (TC) levels were 5.9 mmol/l and 6.0 mmol/l, respectively. Only 3.1% of the patients were reported to have familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) and 12.8% were reported to have a family history of CHD. Reported smoking rates were exceptionally high (77.5% of women and 64.4% of men). The most commonly prescribed group of lipid-lowering agents was HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors. Inadequate management of hypercholesterolaemia leaves many patients with a high risk of CHD mortality in South Africa. Appropriately investigated patients with hypercholesterolaemia should receive treatment to reduce cardiovascular disease using more effective TC control programmes than are currently used in South Africa.
    South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde 01/1999; 88(12):1569-74. · 2.04 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 1992–2005
    • University of Cape Town
      • School of Public Health and Family Medicine
      Cape Town, Province of the Western Cape, South Africa
  • 2001
    • Stellenbosch University
      Stellenbosch, Province of the Western Cape, South Africa
    • Medical Research Council, South Africa
      Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa
  • 1991–1993
    • tygerberg hospital
      Cape Town, Province of the Western Cape, South Africa