Blood Pressure Question

How often when you go to the doctors do they check your blood pressure?


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Yes. He was working in the field, as an engineer and he worked in various capacities on different things. One of them was revamping the presses on a large newpaper, he would be in the room when the presses was running and he thought maybe, it was from the newprint in the air, which was giving him an constant eye irritation problem. His eyes would be swollen, red and generally he was having to wear his glasses constantly, as his sight was diminishing. His eyes constantly was hurting him, he complained about his eyes and headaches.

The doctor put him on sodium drops. He constantly was at this doctor for this problem.

After his demise I learned it was from the hypertension. It was never the newsprint or the ink.
 
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How do you know you got a good son

My son had to go for jury duty. I get this call and he is saying, " mom, I can't do it." It was a case really similar to his dad's.
 
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Peanut9199

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I think he should explain that.
If he does start the trial and his feelings are swayed then it wouldn't be fair to the defendant or the prosecution depending.
Not to say he will want to but i had a co-worker that was on a murder trial and he said it affected him so much he had to have counseling.
Normally the first thing they ask you is can you be impartial if you feelings are one way or the other.
 

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My son was not picked after he disclosed he might not be able to be impartial due to the circumstances with the doctor with his own dad.

The cost for a day for him was pretty expensive. Gas, I put 10 bucks in last night to make sure he had enough. Parking was 24.00. Something to drink from the vending machine was 2.00, a sandwich from the vending machine was 6.00.

What he earned. Nine dollars for the day and 4 cents per mile.

We were kidding him telling him not to quit his day job.
 
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Peanut9199

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I'm glad to hear it, the stress isn't worth it.

The co-worker i mentioned was on jury for 3 months and also only recieved 9 dollars a day as well, but he was still getting paid by the company so he had to hand in the 9 dollars to the company.
 

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No getting rich there, lol.

The parking at 24 bucks kind of got me. The govn should have a shuttle to cheaper garages but I guess that would take some brain power.

I am so glad he wasn't picked Peter.
 

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High blood pressure in U.S. a 'neglected disease' By Julie Steenhuysen - Mon Feb 22, 11:47 AM PSTCHICAGO (Reuters) - High blood pressure is a "neglected disease" and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention must do more to fight it by helping Americans eat better and encouraging doctors to treat it more aggressively, an expert panel said on Monday.


What is Hypertension?




Internal medicine specialist Dr. Ingrid Chung (R) checks for blood pressure of a patient during a medical exam at her practice in Chantilly, Virginia, July 30, 2009. REUTERS/Hyungwon Kang
The report by the Institute of Medicine, one of the National Academies of Sciences, urges the CDC to promote policies that make it easier for people to be more physically active, cut calories and reduce their salt intake.

High blood pressure or hypertension is easily preventable through diet, exercise and drugs, yet it is the second-leading cause of death in the United States, said committee chair David Fleming, who directs Public Health for Seattle and King County in Washington.

"Hypertension as a disease is relatively easy to diagnose and it's inexpensive to treat," Fleming said in a telephone interview.

"Yet despite that, one in six deaths in the United States is due to hypertension, and it costs our healthcare system $73 billion each year in expenses.

"In that context, hypertension is really a neglected disease in this country. There's a huge gap between what we could do and what we are doing," he said.

Fleming said the CDC spends less than $50 million a year for a wide array of heart disease prevention programs that includes hypertension.

Simple steps like consuming less salt and increasing the intake of vegetables, fruit and lean protein could cut rates of high blood pressure by as much as 22 percent, according to the report by the Institute, which advises policymakers.

They cited a recent study that found reducing salt intake to 2,300 milligrams per day -- the current maximum recommended amount -- from 3,400 milligrams a day could cut U.S. health costs by about $17.8 billion each year.

Helping overweight and obese Americans each lose 10 pounds could cut rates of high blood pressure in the overall population by 7 to 8 percent, the group said.

And a program that gets inactive people to exercise could decrease the rate of high blood pressure by 4 percent to 6 percent.

Doctors typically use generic drugs such as beta blockers and ACE inhibitors to control blood pressure. Lowering blood pressure can cut the risk of stroke, heart attack, heart failure and other conditions.

MANY INSURED PEOPLE NOT TREATED

According to the report, 86 percent of people with uncontrolled high blood pressure have insurance and see their doctors regularly. But Fleming said doctors often fail to follow guidelines, which is why many patients do not know they have the condition and are not taking steps to control it.

The group called for the CDC to research the reasons doctors fail to treat high blood pressure, and consider making blood pressure treatment a quality measure in any accreditation program.

The group also asked the CDC to urge the federal Medicare and Medicaid programs and private insurers to reduce out-of-pocket deductibles and co-payments for blood pressure drugs, and to work with the drug industry to simplify the process for patients to get reduced-cost or free drugs.

About half a billion people worldwide have hypertension.

Risk factors include obesity, a sedentary lifestyle and smoking. Chronic illnesses such as diabetes, kidney disease and high cholesterol also can raise one's risk.
 

Ian Gills

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Low BP can be as bad as high.

My father-in-law can no longer drive because he kept passing out.
 

Mikey

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110 over 70 on Tuesday.

I've been taking a fish oil capsule and a multi vitamin in the morning.
And I've cut back on red meat, since last December.

Fish, I've been eating more fish.

I still drink wine.
You sound like me, although I suspect you're a lot younger than 70. I became much more interested in health issues since I was diagnosed with prostate cancer a while back. My treatment regimen took 8 weeks of 1 30-minute treatment per day, so I had lots of time to spend reading about prostate cancer specifically, and lots of other health issues and literature in general.

Recently I've been interested in some of the wacko diet literature, and found one book, "The China Study", that actually makes some sense. It's an argument by a credible scientist against the Western diet, advocating no animal protein, among other things. I found this shortly after a Vegan niece visited for a couple of weeks. She made a deal that she would cook if I'd eat it, so I was a Vegan for a short time. I was surprised to see that I felt significantly better after a few days of it. She's gone now, and although I've fallen off the Vegan wagon, like you I eat very little red meat and continue to try to adopt a vegetarian lifestyle.

There's a more extreme philosophy that says your veggies should be eaten raw, since critical enzymes are destroyed at 115°, eliminating their effectiveness in fighting disease and promoting self-help. All in all, I'm surprised to find I think these folks may have something worth looking into.
 

hj

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Everytime. Usually when I get the results, I ask if I should be checking burial plans, because there does not seem to be enough there, but they say it is perfect.
 
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