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High Blood Pressure Lifestyle Management Checklist

Medium 17 items · 20 min
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testuser Published 1 month ago

Practical, actionable steps to help people with high blood pressure monitor readings and adopt heart-healthy habits. Suitable for adults managing hypertension alongside medical care; consult your clinician for personalized targets.

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  1. Choose a validated home blood pressure monitor — Use an upper-arm, clinically validated device for accuracy.
  2. Position cuff on bare upper arm at heart level — Place cuff about 1 inch above the elbow; support the arm on a table.
  3. Sit quietly for 5 minutes before measuring — Remain seated with feet flat and back supported; avoid talking.
  4. Take two readings 1 minute apart and record the average — Measure in the morning and evening when possible and log both.
  5. Avoid caffeine, smoking, and exercise 30 minutes before measuring — These can temporarily raise readings; wait before testing.
  6. Keep a log of readings and share them with your clinician — Include date, time, and any symptoms or medication changes.
  7. Follow the blood pressure target set by your doctor — Ask your clinician to confirm your personal goal and plan.
  8. Reduce daily sodium toward 1,500–2,300 mg — Aim lower if advised by your clinician; cut processed foods.
  9. Read nutrition labels and choose low-sodium options — Compare 'sodium' per serving and pick the lower-salt product.
  10. Adopt DASH-style meals: increase fruits, vegetables, whole grains — Favor lean proteins and low-fat dairy; limit processed foods.
  11. Limit alcohol to recommended amounts — Generally ≤2 drinks/day for men and ≤1 drink/day for women.
  12. Do at least 150 minutes of moderate aerobic exercise weekly — Aim for 30 minutes most days (walking, cycling, swimming).
  13. Start weight-loss steps if overweight (aim for gradual loss) — Losing 5% of body weight can meaningfully lower BP.
  14. Practice daily stress-reduction techniques — Try deep breathing, meditation, yoga, or short walks.
  15. Take medications exactly as prescribed — Do not stop or change doses without consulting your clinician.
  16. Set up regular follow-up and medication reviews with your clinician — Schedule routine visits and lab checks as recommended.
  17. Quit smoking and avoid tobacco exposure — Seek cessation support; tobacco worsens blood pressure and heart risk.
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