Health & Fitness

Blood Pressure Monitors Available At Yonkers Library

The county health department partnered to increase access to tools that help identify hypertension.

County Executive George Latimer had his blood pressure checked Monday, March 25 at the Yonkers Riverfront Library.
County Executive George Latimer had his blood pressure checked Monday, March 25 at the Yonkers Riverfront Library. (Westchester County)

WHITE PLAINS, NY — Westchester County Executive George Latimer, Health Commissioner Sherlita Amler, MD, Yonkers Public Library staff and the American Heart Association, along with Yonkers residents, demonstrated Monday the ease of checking one's blood pressure with an automated blood pressure cuff now available to use or check out at the Yonkers Riverfront Library. Three identical blood pressure cuffs were given to the library through a pilot program funded by a New York State grant to promote and provide opportunities for self-measured blood pressure monitoring in the community.

Users sit down, slip their arm into the sleeve, relax and push a button, and the machine does the rest.

“Placing these cuffs at the library will make it as easy to check your blood pressure as it is to borrow a book," Latimer said. "That’s a good thing, because it can prompt you to see a doctor and learn strategies to reduce your blood pressure.”

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Health Commissioner Sherlita Amler, MD, said that hypertension, or high blood pressure, is known as the silent killer because many people don’t know they have it until it is too late.

"By making these automated cuffs more accessible to the public, we hope to save lives and encourage residents to work with a health care provider to help bring their blood pressure under control,” she said.

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Amler said that one in three adults have hypertension, which increases the risk of heart disease — the No. 1 cause of death in Westchester.

She said the risk can be reduced by maintaining a healthy weight, reducing the consumption of salt, fat, cholesterol and alcohol, exercising more and eating more fruits and vegetables.

Through a partnership with CLUSTER, case managers will be available at the Yonkers Riverfront Library on designated days and times to assist residents with blood pressure monitoring, and library patrons can use the automated cuffs to check their own blood pressure when the library is open. Other services offered through the library include nutritional guidance, along with classes in yoga, Zumba and mindfulness that can help residents reduce their high blood pressure.

The County Health Department has 16 more automated blood pressure cuffs to distribute and wants to hear from other agencies and organizations that can make the monitors accessible to residents. For more information, contact Patrick Quinn at 995-6588.

Everyone who uses the cuff, as well as anyone monitoring their blood pressure at home with their own cuff, can track their blood pressure over time using the American Heart Association’s Check, Change, Control. online tracking tool. To create a free account, go to www.ccctracker.com; and use the campaign code CHKBP.

According to the CDC, 34.6 million adults in the US have uncontrolled hypertension; of these 11.6 million don’t know they have it. In New York, 4.8 million adults — one in every three — are estimated to have hypertension, and only 63 percent have it under control. In Westchester, an estimated 28.5 percent of adults were diagnosed with hypertension in 2016.

Normal blood pressure is less than 120/80, but one high blood pressure reading does not mean you have hypertension. Blood pressure must be measured at different times, while you are resting comfortably for at least five minutes. To diagnose hypertension, at least three readings greater than 120/80 are usually required, medical authorities said.

More information about hypertension is available at www.westchestergov.com/health.


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