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NFH survey shows J&K facing severe BP crisis, docs flag reasons

The data from the National Family Health Survey-5 (NFHS-5) reveals that this growing health challenge is linked to changing lifestyles, stress, poor dietary habits and lack of physical activity. Doctors attribute the growing burden of hypertension to unhealthy eating habits, excessive salt intake, obesity, lack of exercise, smoking, alcohol consumption, mental stress and sedentary lifestyles.

News Arena Network - Srinagar - UPDATED: May 19, 2026, 04:21 PM - 2 min read

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Hypertension is emerging as a major public health concern in Jammu and Kashmir, with official figures revealing that only 36 per cent of women and 31 per cent of men in the Union Territory have normal blood pressure levels, according to the National Family Health Survey-5.

 

The data from the National Family Health Survey-5 (NFHS-5) reveals that this growing health challenge is linked to changing lifestyles, stress, poor dietary habits and lack of physical activity.The survey further reveals that nearly 57 per cent of the population falls in the pre-hypertensive category, a condition considered an early warning sign before the onset of hypertension. Doctors attribute the growing burden of hypertension to unhealthy eating habits, excessive salt intake, obesity, lack of exercise, smoking, alcohol consumption, mental stress and sedentary lifestyles.

 

Health experts say people in this stage are highly vulnerable to developing full-fledged high blood pressure if preventive measures are not adopted in time.According to the data, around 11 per cent of women and 10 per cent of men aged between 15 and 49 years are already living with hypertension in Jammu and Kashmir.

 

The figures also highlight a steady rise in hypertension with increasing age. Among adolescents aged 15 to 19 years, only about three per cent are hypertensive. However, the prevalence gradually increases across age groups, reaching four per cent among people aged 20–24 years, seven per cent in the 25–29 age group, 8.5 per cent among those aged 30–34 years, 14 per cent in the 35–39 age bracket, and nearly 20 per cent among people aged 40–45 years. The rate further climbs to 24 per cent among individuals aged 45–49 years.

 

At the same time, the percentage of people with normal blood pressure declines sharply with age. While nearly 60 per cent of teenagers in the 15–19 age group have normal blood pressure, the figure drops to just 17 per cent among people aged 45–49 years.The survey also points towards a rise in pre-hypertension with age. Around 40 per cent of adolescents fall in the pre-hypertensive category, while the percentage increases to nearly 62 per cent in older adults aged 45–49 years.

 

Urban areas in Jammu and Kashmir reported slightly higher cases of hypertension compared to rural regions. Among women, nearly 10.3 per cent in urban areas were found to be hypertensive compared to 9.7 per cent in rural areas. A similar trend was observed among men as well.

 

 

Medical experts described hypertension as a “silent killer” because it often develops without noticeable symptoms, while gradually damaging vital organs and increasing the risk of heart attacks, brain strokes, kidney failure and other life-threatening complications.

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