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1.
Public Health Action ; 9(3): 102-106, 2019 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31803581

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Providing medical care for non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in rural sub-Saharan Africa has proved to be difficult because of poor treatment adherence and frequent loss to follow-up (LTFU). The reasons for this are poorly understood. OBJECTIVE: To investigate LTFU among patients with two different but common NCDs who attended rural Ethiopian health centres. METHOD: The study was based in five health centres in southern Ethiopia with established NCD clinics run by nurses and health officers. Patients with epilepsy or hypertension who were lost to follow-up and non-LTFU comparison patients were identified and traced; a questionnaire was administered enquiring about the reasons for LTFU. RESULTS: Of the 147 LTFU patients successfully located, 62 had died, moved away or were attending other medical facilities. The remaining 85 patients were compared with 211 non-LFTU patients. The major factors associated with LTFU were distance from the clinic, associated costs and a preference for traditional treatments, together with a misunderstanding of the nature of NCD management. CONCLUSIONS: The delivery of affordable care closer to the patients' homes has the greatest potential to address the problem of LTFU. Also needed are increased levels of patient education and interaction with traditional healers to explain the nature of NCDs and the need for life-long management.

2.
Eur J Clin Nutr ; 64(10): 1192-8, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20664624

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Most insulin-requiring diabetes patients in Ethiopia have an atypical form of the disease, which resembles previous descriptions of malnutrition-related diabetes. As so little is known about its aetiology, we have carried out a case-control study to evaluate its social and nutritional determinants. SUBJECTS/METHODS: Men and women with insulin-requiring diabetes (n=107), aged 18-40 years, were recruited in two centres, Gondar and Jimma, 750 km northwest and 330 km southwest of the capital, Addis Ababa, respectively. Controls of similar age and sex (n=110) were recruited from patients attending other hospital clinics. RESULTS: Diabetes was strongly associated with subsistence farming, odds ratio=3.5 (95% confidence interval: 1.5-7.8) and illiteracy/low levels of education, odds ratio=4.0 (2.0-8.0). Diabetes was also linked with a history of childhood malnutrition, odds ratio=5.5 (1.0-29.0) the mother's death during childhood, odds ratio=3.9 (1.0-14.8), and markers of poverty including poorer access to sanitation (P=0.004), clean water (P=0.009), greater overcrowding (P=0.04), increased distance from the clinic (P=0.01) and having fewer possessions (P=0.01). Compared with controls, people with diabetes had low mid upper arm circumference, body mass index (BMI) and fat/lean body mass (P<0.01). In addition, men with the disease tended to be shorter, were lighter (P=0.001), with reduced sitting height (P=0.015) and reduced biacromial (P=0.003) and bitrochanteric (P=0.008) diameters. CONCLUSIONS: Insulin-requiring diabetes in Ethiopia is strongly linked with poor education and markers of poverty. Men with the disease have associated disproportionate skeletal growth. These findings point towards a nutritional aetiology for this condition although the nature of the nutritional deficiency and its timing during growth and development remains obscure.


Subject(s)
Body Weights and Measures , Child Development/physiology , Child Nutrition Disorders , Diabetes Complications/epidemiology , Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiology , Malnutrition/complications , Poverty Areas , Adolescent , Adult , Bone Development , Case-Control Studies , Child , Diabetes Mellitus/drug therapy , Ethiopia/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Insulin/therapeutic use , Male , Malnutrition/epidemiology , Sex Factors , Socioeconomic Factors , Young Adult
3.
Diabetologia ; 52(9): 1842-5, 2009 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19565213

ABSTRACT

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: We evaluated the incidence of insulin-requiring diabetes in a rural area of sub-Saharan Africa. METHODS: Health surveillance data from a chronic disease programme in two zones of Ethiopia, Gondar and Jimma, were studied. The two zones have a population of more than 5,000,000 people. RESULTS: In Gondar Zone (1995-2008) and Jimma Zone (2002-2008) 2,280 patients presented with diabetes, of whom 1,029 (45%) required insulin for glycaemic control at diagnosis. The annual incidence of insulin-requiring diabetes was 2.1 (95% CI 2.0-2.2) per 100,000 and was twice as high in men (2.9 per 100,000) as in women (1.4 per 100,000). In both sexes incidence rates peaked at the age of 25 to 29 years. Incidence rates in the urban areas of Gondar and Jimma were five times higher than in the surrounding rural areas. Patients with insulin-requiring diabetes from rural and urban areas had a very low BMI and most were subsistence farmers or unemployed. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: The typical patient with diabetes in rural Ethiopia is an impoverished, young adult male with severe symptoms requiring insulin for glycaemic control. The low incidence rates in rural compared with urban areas suggest that many cases of this disease remain undiagnosed. The disease phenotype encountered in this area of Africa is very different from the classical type 1 diabetes seen in the West and most closely resembles previous descriptions of malnutrition-related diabetes, a category not recognised in the current WHO Diabetes Classification. We believe that the case for this condition should be reopened.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/epidemiology , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/epidemiology , Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiology , Malnutrition/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Body Mass Index , Child , Diabetes Mellitus/etiology , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/classification , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/etiology , Ethiopia/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Incidence , Male , Malnutrition/complications , Middle Aged , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data , Young Adult
4.
Seizure ; 18(2): 100-3, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18701322

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In 1998, we set up nurse-led epilepsy clinics in five rural health centres around Gondar in northern Ethiopia. Despite good treatment outcomes, two years after registration only 40% of patients were still under follow-up. AIM: The purpose of this study was to examine the causes of default and factors that might improve adherence to follow-up. METHOD: The study was carried out at one of the five health centres. Patients who had defaulted from follow-up were identified from the clinic register. Trained enumerators visited the patients' villages and administered a questionnaire to the patients, or relatives if the patient was not available. RESULTS: 113 patients were traced. 28 (25%) had died and 21 (19%) had moved from the area. Of the remaining 64 patients, seven were accessing treatment from another source and 13 were in remission off treatment. 44 patients were still experiencing seizures and were on no treatment or had reverted to traditional remedies. The main reason given for default, in 44% of the patients, was difficulty in travelling to the health centre. 12% claimed that they preferred traditional remedies and 9% felt that they had not been improved by medical treatment. CONCLUSION: Despite decentralisation of care to rural health centres, the most common reason for default was the distance to travel to the health centre. Further decentralisation of care to a community level coupled with improved education may reduce default from follow-up.


Subject(s)
Epilepsy/therapy , Health Services Accessibility , Outpatient Clinics, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Primary Health Care/methods , Rural Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Attitude to Health , Child , Ethiopia , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Compliance , Patient-Centered Care , Rural Health , Rural Population , Surveys and Questionnaires
5.
Anaesthesia ; 62 Suppl 1: 15-20, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17937708

ABSTRACT

Health services can respond to the needs of the poorest people in developing countries if those who work in the front line of health care are supported and motivated and if development needs in services and training programmes can be filled. This can be achieved when a Health Link between a southern hospital and/or training school and its northern counterpart is designed to build a disciplined and long-term programme of staff development including the needs of anaesthetic services, which meets the needs identified by the southern partner. Development of anaesthetic practice is best carried out in the context of an institution-wide Health Link where not only the staff and systems involved in anaesthesia but all the essential 'back office' or support services are also supported and developed.


Subject(s)
Anesthesiology/organization & administration , Developing Countries , Hospital Administration , International Cooperation , Anesthesiology/standards , Developed Countries , Financing, Organized , Health Personnel/education , Humans
11.
Bull. W.H.O. (Print) ; 51(2): 203-208, 1974.
Article in English | WHO IRIS | ID: who-260720
12.
Bull. W.H.O. (Print) ; 39(6): 859-871, 1968.
Article in English | WHO IRIS | ID: who-266639
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