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Even if high blood pressure too has plateaued, the actual number is increasing because the nation's adult population is growing -- especially the baby boomer-bolstered ranks of people in their 50s and older.
The number of adults with high blood pressure grew from about 59 million to more than 66 million over the 10 years, Yoon said.
Other estimates put it at at least 74 million.
"It's nice to see we're making progress with awareness and control, but 30 percent of a big number is a very big number," said Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones, a Northwestern University preventive medicine specialist who is a spokesman for the American Heart Association.
Lloyd-Jones and Wenger said they were perhaps most impressed by another finding: Among adults with high blood pressure, nearly half have it under control with medications, an increase from 30 percent.
That could be because cheaper generic medications are more widely available, Wenger said.
"You don't cure hypertension, you control it," she said.
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Online:
CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/
[Associated
Press;
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