Title: DIABETES IN SUBSAHARAN AFRICA
1DIABETES IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
2The future burden of diabetes in sub-Saharan
Africa
2030
2025
2010
3- Africa is experiencing a rapid epidemiological
transition with the burden of non-communicable
diseases esp. diabetes that will overwhelm the
health care systems which is already overburdened
by HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria. - This is due to
- Rapid urbanization and westernization of
lifestyle - Rapidly decreasing physical activity
- Changes in dietary habits
- Ageing of the population
4What is different about DM in Africa?
- Decreases survival from the disease.
- Most countries do not have national diabetes
programmes. - Medications are unavailable or irregularly
available and unaffordable. - Well-structured educational programs for the
patients and health professionals are lacking.. - Unequal distribution of facilities and providers.
5Age
- RISK FACTORS
- NON MODIFIABLE
- Age
- Ethnicity/predisposition
- MODIFIABLE
- Obesity
- Urbanization
- Physical inactivity
- Change in dietary habits
Prevalence of diabetes by age group in a
population of Cameroon
Mbanya JC et al
6Obesity
- RISK FACTORS
- NON MODIFIABLE
- Age
- Predisposition
- MODIFIABLE
- Obesity
- Urbanization
- Physical inactivity
- Change in dietary habits
7Childhood Obesity
- RISK FACTORS
- NON MODIFIABLE
- Age
- Predisposition
- MODIFIABLE
- Obesity
- Urbanization
- Physical inactivity
- Change in dietary habits
8Average percentage annual increase in urban and
rural populations, 1995-2000
- RISK FACTORS
- NON MODIFIABLE
- Age
- Predisposition
- MODIFIABLE
- Obesity
- Urbanization
- Physical Inactivity
- Change in dietary habits
9Physical Inactivity
- RISK FACTORS
- NON MODIFIABLE
- Age
- Predisposition
- MODIFIABLE
- Obesity
- Urbanization
- Physical Inactivity
- Change in dietary habits
Daily walking time in a sample of 2465 urban and
rural Cameroonians (Sobngwi E, et al Int J Obes
2002)
10TYPE 1 DIABETES INCIDENCE
INCIDENCE/100,000 of Type 1 diabetes in Sudan (El
Amin et al.)
11Type 1 DM in Africa- Clinical characteristics of
Type 1 diabetes in Africa Patients
12Type 2 DM in Africa
- Data
- increasing but limited
- Not rare
- low in rural areas
- moderate in rural and urban areas with
development - high in urban areas
- Urban gt Rural
- IGT
- early stage of epidemic
- Increasing in same population
- Ethnicity
- Modifiable risk factors
13SUMMARY OF CURRENT PREVALENCE OF TYPE 2 DIABETES
- Rural Sub Saharan Africa 1 3.5
- Urban Sub Saharan Africa 3 7.7
- Republic of South Africa 4.8 8.0
- Maghrebian countries 6.3 9.3
- Indian origin populations 8.6 13.3
-
14Complications of diabetes
- Increasing prevalence of diabetes and their
complications in Sub-saharan Africa are a major
drain on health resources in addition to physical
and social impact on an individual and community
15Acute complications of diabetes
- Diabetic ketoacidosis
- Hyperosmolar non-ketotic coma
- Hypoglycaemia
16Diabetic ketoacidosis
- Common emergency
- High mortality 25 in Tanzania, 33 in Kenya
- Contributing factors
- Lack of insulin availability
- Delay in diagnosis
- Misdiagnosis
- Economics
- Poor healthcare system
- infections
17Hyperosmolar non-ketotic coma
- Complication of type 2 diabetes
- Less common
- Accounts for about 10 of all hyperglycaemic
emergencies (Zouvanis et al, 1987) - Contributing factors
- Infections
- Non-compliance
- First presentation
- Mortality high 44 - studies from South Africa
(Rolfe et al, 1995) patients usually elderly
and have other major illness
18Hypoglycaemia
- Serious complication of OHA therapy
- In South Africa (Gill Huddle,1993) 33 of cases
associated with sulphonylurea treatment - Other precipitating causes
- Missed meal (36)
- Alcohol (22)
- GI upset (20)
- Inappropriate treatment
19Microvascular complications of diabetes RETINOPATH
Y
20RETINOPATHY
- In South Africa, at diagnosis, 21-25 of type 2
diabetes and 9.5 of type 1 diabetes have
retinopathy (Kalk et al,1997). - ? Genetic predisposition africans more affected
- Poor/inadequate access to healh care leading to
inadequate control of blood glucose and blood
pressure.
21Microvascular complications of diabetes
NEPHROPATHY
microabuminuria
22NEPHROPATHY
- Diabetes contributes to 35 of all patients
admitted to dialysis unit (Diallo et al,1997) - In South African series, 50 of all causes of
mortality in type 1 diabetes was due to renal
failure (Gill, Huddle Rolfe, 1995)
23Microvascular complications of diabetes NEUROPATHY
24NEUROPATHY
- Prevalence varies widely depending on method
used. - Poor glycaemic control and inadequate foot care
are risk factors for diabetic foot.
25Epidemiology of Diabetic Foot(Abbas ZG)
- 40-60 of all non-traumatic amputations
- 85 of diabetes related lower extremity
amputations - The prevalence of foot ulcer is 4-15 of diabetes
population
26MACROVASCULAR COMPLICATIONS OF DIABETES
27Diabetes - Clinical course
- ETHIOPIA Causes of death in 100 Ethiopian
diabetic patients 1976 - 1983. - At death- 45 of patients below age 50
years 46 below 10 years of diabetic duration - Causes of death- Metabolic 47 Renal
Failure 26 Infective 12
Cirrhosis 10 Stroke 8
Other 12 Not known 15 - Lester FT. Ethiopian Med J 1984 2 61-68
28Diabetes - Clinical CourseSouth Africa
29Clinical course of DiabetesTanzania (Dar es
Salaam)
30Insulin / OHA costs
- Tanzania (1989-90)-
- Average annual direct cost of diabetes care US
287.00 IRDM US 103.00 NIDDM - Purchase of insulin accounted for US 156.00
(68.2) of the average annual outpatient costs
for IRDM. - OHA accounted for US 29.30 (42.5) of the
average annual outpatient costs for NIDDM.
Chale SS et al. For Med J 1992 304 1215-8
31Costs of treatment
- In Cameroon (Nkegoum, 2002) in the year 2001
- Average direct medical cost of treating a patient
with diabetes was USD 489. - 56 -hospital admission
- 33.5 - anti-diabetic drugs
- 5.5 -laboratory tests
- 4.5 on consultation fee.
32Indirect cost of diabetes (Tanzania 1989-90)
Future Healthy Life Days (HLDs) lost per patient
with diabetes during the 8 years of follow-up
.
IRDM
NIDDM
Uncertain
Overall
Reason for lost days
(n3626)
(n2390)
(n1974)
(n4100)
Premature death
55.1
39.7
96.8
69
Disability before death
0.5
3.9
0.4
1
Chronic disability
43.3
55.7
2.4
29
Acute Illness
1.1
0.6
0.4
1
Chale SS. A study of the Economic Costs of
Diabetes Mellitus in Tanzania in 1989/90. UDSM
33- This increasing burden is against a background of
decreasing resources. - Therefore primary prevention must be the
cornerstone of policies aimed at combating these
lifestyle related diseases.
34Prevention StrategiesProblems in Africa
- Mortality
- Poorly skilled or inadequate providers
- Delay - attention
- Drugs availability
- - affordability
- Complications
- ? awareness
- ? facilities detection
- - monitoring
- economics
35Barriers to Quality care
- Irregular supply of medicines (including insulin)
- Inadequate health-care infrastructure and
disproportionate distribution of the facilities - Affordability
- Lack of adequate training and retraining of
health care providers - Lack of education to the people living with
diabetes their families - Differing government priorities
36IDF AFRICA REGION - RESPONSE
- Diabetes Practice Guidelines.
- Diabetes Education Training manual
- African Declaration on Diabetes
- Training
- Strengthening national diabetes associations
- Research / data