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The effects of HIV and systolic blood pressure on mortality risk in rural South Africa, 2010-2019: a data note

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Houle, Brian
Clark, Samuel J
Kabudula, Chodziwadziwa
Gomez-Olive, F. Xavier
Angotti, Nicole
Schatz, Enid
Tilstra, Andrea M
Mojola, Sanyu A
Menken, Jane

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BioMed Central

Abstract

Objectives South Africa is experiencing both HIV and hypertension epidemics. Data were compiled for a study to identify effects of HIV and high systolic blood pressure on mortality risk among people aged 40-plus in a rural South African area experiencing high prevalence of both conditions. We aim to release the replication data set for this study. Data description The research data comes from the 2010-11 Ha Nakekela (We Care) population-based survey nested in the Agincourt Health and socio-Demographic Surveillance System (AHDSS) located in the northeast region of South Africa. An age-sex-stratified probability sample was drawn from the AHDSS. The public data set includes information on individual socioeconomic characteristics and measures of HIV status and blood pressure for participants aged 40-plus by 2019. The AHDSS, through its annual surveillance, provided mortality data for nine years subsequent to the survey. These data were converted to person-year observations and linked to the individual-level survey data using participants’ AHDSS census identifier. The data can be used to replicate Houle et al. (2022) — which used discrete-time event history models stratified by sex to assess differential mortality risks according to Ha Nakekela measures of HIV-infection, HIV-1 RNA viral load, and systolic blood pressure.

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BMC Research Notes

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Open Access

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Creative Commons Attribution licence

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