![Doctor Takes Blood Pressure Reading](/news/sites/default/files/styles/hero/public/2018-10/dr-gbenga-ogedegbe-demonstrates-proper-blood-pressure-technique.jpg?h=036f3151&itok=l84B7dT_)
Dr. Gbenga G. Ogedegbe demonstrates the proper technique for taking blood pressure readings at a church in Harlem.
Photo: Mike Weymouth
Heart disease is the leading cause of death in New York City, and African Americans have a significantly greater burden of hypertension and heart conditions. New research led by Gbenga G. Ogedegbe, MD, MPH, professor in the at 秘密研究所 Langone, shows that community health workers using a faith-based intervention delivered in churches were able to significantly reduce and manage hypertension in black communities.
鈥淲hen we pray, what do we do? We do a whole set of repetitive patterns. You are contemplating something, and all those processes lead to a reduction in pulse rate,鈥 Dr. Ogedegbe tells The Wall Street Journal, noting that prayer鈥攖aken as a form of meditation鈥攚as an important part of the program.
Dr. Ogedegbe and his team found that after 6 months, study participants in the faith-based intervention group saw a net reduction of 5.8 millimeters of mercury in systolic blood pressure. According to Dr. Ogedegbe, if sustained over 4 to 5 years, this reduction can reduce heart attacks and strokes by at least 20 percent.
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