Ghana Health Nest

  • News
  • Public Health
  • Big Pharma
  • Discover
  • Lifestyle
  • Multimedia
Reading: WHO Report: 1.4 Billion People Living With Hypertension, Yet Few Have It Under Control
Support

Ghana Health Nest

Support
Search
  • News
  • Public Health
  • Big Pharma
  • Discover
  • Lifestyle
  • Multimedia
©2024 Vessel Media. All Rights Reserved.

WHO Report: 1.4 Billion People Living With Hypertension, Yet Few Have It Under Control

Hypertension remains a leading cause of heart attack, stroke, kidney disease, and dementia. Without urgent action, WHO warns that millions will die prematurely while countries face trillions in economic losses.

Kelvin Odonkor
By Kelvin Odonkor - Health Editor Published September 24, 2025
Share
3 Min Read

The World Health Organization (WHO) has sounded the alarm in its newly released Global Hypertension Report 2025, revealing that 1.4 billion people worldwide live with high blood pressure, but only a little over one in five manage to keep it under control.

Launched during the 80th United Nations General Assembly and co-hosted with Bloomberg Philanthropies and Resolve to Save Lives, the report highlights deep inequities in hypertension care, particularly in low- and middle-income countries.

A Growing Global Health and Economic Crisis

Hypertension remains a leading cause of heart attack, stroke, kidney disease, and dementia. Without urgent action, WHO warns that millions will die prematurely while countries face trillions in economic losses. Between 2011 and 2025 alone, cardiovascular diseases, including hypertension, are projected to cost LMICs nearly US$3.7 trillion – about 2% of their GDP.

“Every hour, over 1000 lives are lost to strokes and heart attacks caused by high blood pressure, and most of these deaths are preventable,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.

Persistent Barriers in Low-Income Countries

Analysis from 195 countries shows that nearly 100 countries record hypertension control rates below 20%. Key obstacles include:

- Advertisement -
  • Weak policies on lifestyle risk factors (tobacco, alcohol, diet, inactivity)
  • Poor access to validated blood pressure devices
  • Lack of standardized treatment guidelines and trained primary care teams
  • Unreliable medicine supply chains and high out-of-pocket costs
  • Weak information systems to track and monitor progress

Notably, just 28% of low-income countries report that all WHO-recommended medicines are available in pharmacies or primary care facilities, compared with 93% of high-income countries.

“Safe, effective, low-cost medicines to control blood pressure exist, but far too many people can’t get them,” said Dr Tom Frieden, President of Resolve to Save Lives.

Country Examples of Progress

Despite challenges, the report points to success stories:

  • Bangladesh: Increased control rates from 15% to 56% in some regions by embedding treatment into essential health services.
  • Philippines: Rolled out WHO’s HEARTS technical package nationwide.
  • Republic of Korea: Reforms that lowered patient costs pushed national control rates to 59% in 2022.

“Countries that integrate hypertension care into universal health coverage are showing real results,” said Dr Kelly Henning of Bloomberg Philanthropies. “Strong policies and expanded access to treatment are critical.”

A Call to Action

WHO is urging governments to embed hypertension care into universal health coverage (UHC) reforms, strengthen primary health care systems, and ensure equitable access to essential medicines.

If fully implemented, the report notes, these measures could save millions of lives and reduce the massive social and economic toll of uncontrolled high blood pressure

- Advertisement -
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Print
By Kelvin Odonkor Health Editor
Follow:
Kelvin Odonkor is the managing health editor at Ghana Health Nest. He is a Professional Mental Health Nurse, a passionate Health Communications & Advocacy practitioner, a multiple award-winning Health Blogger, also known for his impactful work as a Social documentary Photographer. Kelvin is an alumni of the prestigious IVLP (Global Health) and a 2024 IVLP Impact Awardee for Combatting Health Misinformation/Disinformation
Previous Article Ghana Launches New National Strategy to Strengthen Patient Safety
Next Article US officially leaves World Health Organization

HOT NEWS

AfricaDiscover & LearnHealth News

Report: African health journalism under unprecedented strain

March 3, 2026

NHIA Rolls Out Campus Connect to Bring NHIS Services Closer to Tertiary Students

February 7, 2026

Ghana Launches Parliamentarian Caucus on Immunization Ahead of 2029 Gavi Transition

February 6, 2026
Professor Dzifa dey,Ghana

Professor Dzifa Dey Appointed Associate Global Director for Sub-Saharan Africa at the Royal College of Physicians

February 14, 2026

You Might Also Like

AfricaDiscover & LearnHealth News

Report: African health journalism under unprecedented strain

March 3, 2026
AfricaHealth News

ANMC Conference to Champion Unified Nursing and Midwifery Standards in Africa

February 28, 2026
TIME100 Health Dr Mimi Darko
Discover & LearnGlobal

Ghanaian pharmacist Delese Mimi Darko named in the 2026 TIMEHealth 100

February 14, 2026
Professor Dzifa dey,Ghana
AfricaDiscover & Learn

Professor Dzifa Dey Appointed Associate Global Director for Sub-Saharan Africa at the Royal College of Physicians

February 14, 2026

Ghana Health Nest

Your trusted source for health news, tips, and wellness resources in Ghana.

About

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with us
  • Sitemap

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Cookie Policy
  • Editorial Policy

Follow us

Facebook Twitter Instagram Rss

©2026 Vessel Media. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?