Self-Perception of Aging and Hypertension in a Cohort of Sexual Minority

  • Jacobsen A
  • Polanka B
  • Ware D
  • et al.
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Abstract

Objectives To determine whether self-perception of aging is an important marker of health and hypertension among older sexual minority men. Methods We evaluated associations between self-perception of aging (chronologic-subjective age discrepancy and aging satisfaction) and hypertension among 1,180 sexual minority men (51.6% with HIV/48.4% without HIV) from the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study using a manifest Markov chain model adjusted for HIV status, age, race/ethnicity, education, smoking status, inhaled nitrite use, diabetes, dyslipidemia, kidney and liver disease. Results The overall prevalence of hypertension increased from 73.1% to 82.6% over three years of follow-up. Older age discrepancy (aOR (adjusted odds ratio): 1.13 95% CI: 0.35-3.69) and low aging satisfaction (aOR: 0.88; 95% CI: 0.31-2.52) were not associated with an increased prevalence of hypertension, regardless of HIV status. Discussion More than 80% of sexual minority men had a diagnosis of hypertension but self-perception of aging was not predictive of incident hypertension.

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APA

Jacobsen, A. P., Polanka, B. M., Ware, D., Haberlen, S. A., Brennan-Ing, M., Meanley, S., … Plankey, M. (2023). Self-Perception of Aging and Hypertension in a Cohort of Sexual Minority. Cureus. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.43127

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