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Health Guide

High Blood Pressure at Home in Ghana — How to Manage It Properly

EOM
Emmanuel Opoku Mireku, BSc Nursing, MPH
Founder & Clinical Director, CareEdge Ghana
Published April 12, 2025 · Clinical Guide · ✓ Reviewed by Mr. Christian Owusu, Clinical Lead

Hypertension — high blood pressure — is one of the most common health conditions in Ghana, affecting a significant proportion of adults over 40. It is also one of the most underestimated. Because hypertension often has no obvious symptoms, many Ghanaians live with dangerously high blood pressure for years without knowing it — until it causes a stroke, heart attack, or kidney failure.

Why home management matters for hypertension

Hypertension cannot be managed only at clinic visits. Blood pressure changes throughout the day — affected by stress, sleep, diet, medication, and physical activity. A single reading at a clinic does not tell the full picture. Regular home monitoring, medication adherence, and lifestyle management are essential for proper control.

What a healthy blood pressure looks like

For most adults, a blood pressure reading below 130/80 mmHg is considered normal. Readings consistently above 140/90 mmHg indicate hypertension requiring treatment. Readings above 180/120 mmHg are a hypertensive emergency — seek medical attention immediately.

Key elements of home hypertension management

Medication adherence

This is the single most important factor. Antihypertensive medications must be taken every day, at the same time, exactly as prescribed. Skipping doses — even feeling well — allows blood pressure to spike dangerously. A CareEdge nurse reviews medication compliance at every visit.

Regular blood pressure monitoring

Blood pressure should be checked at least twice daily — morning and evening — and the readings recorded. Our nurses check blood pressure at every visit and flag trends that suggest poor control to the doctor.

Diet

Reducing salt intake is the most impactful dietary change for hypertension. In the Ghanaian diet, this means being mindful of seasoning cubes, smoked fish, processed foods, and tinned products — all of which are very high in sodium. Our nurses provide practical dietary guidance specific to Ghanaian eating habits.

Warning signs of hypertensive emergency: Severe headache, vision changes, chest pain, difficulty breathing, or sudden confusion require emergency attention immediately. Call for help and contact CareEdge.

How CareEdge supports hypertensive patients at home

For patients with hypertension, CareEdge provides regular blood pressure monitoring, medication reviews, dietary guidance, and doctor oversight of every reading and trend. Family members receive updates after every visit so everyone stays informed about your loved one's cardiovascular health.

Need care for your family?

Our team responds within the hour — every day, 6am to 10pm.

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