As we move into holiday mode, substituting our normal focus on salt for visions of sugarplums, some "highly encouraging" news from this week's journal Hypertension . Drs. Kwok Leung Ong and colleagues in Hong Kong, studying the massive US federal NHANES database, report that 75.7% of Americans with hypertension know that fact (up from 68.7% four years earlier) and 36.8% have it controlled (compared with 29.2% in the earlier study).

Good news indeed. And it's siginficantly grounded in the biggest federal database. As the authors note: "The NHANES database has been valuable for the study of the trends in the health status of a population because of its large sample size, complex sampling design, good quality control, and comprehensive content."

The authors found four reasons for the improvement: 1) obesity isn't increasing (missed that in the MSM, I'll bet!), 2) "better publicity and education," 3) better use of treatment guidelines for medications (as opposed to development on new meds themselves) and 4) "an increase in the use of antihypertensive medications."

No mention of salt, by the way. An ealier NHANES analysis found that those on lower salt diets don't benefit anyway. They had 37% higher cardiovascular mortality than those on normal salt. That's some pretty good news too! Merry Christmas.

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