Ischaemic heart disease, stroke, and their cardiometabolic risk factors in Africa: current challenges and outlook for the future.
Africa South of the Sahara
Cardiometabolic Risk Factors
Cardiovascular Diseases
/ prevention & control
Cost of Illness
Delivery of Health Care
/ organization & administration
Diabetes Mellitus
/ epidemiology
Dyslipidemias
/ complications
Humans
Hypertension
/ complications
Myocardial Ischemia
/ prevention & control
Obesity
/ complications
Stroke
/ prevention & control
Africa
cardiovascular diseases
cholesterol
diabetes
heart attack
hypertension
lipids
obesity
primary healthcare
stroke
Journal
Expert review of cardiovascular therapy
ISSN: 1744-8344
Titre abrégé: Expert Rev Cardiovasc Ther
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101182328
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Feb 2021
Feb 2021
Historique:
pubmed:
12
12
2020
medline:
23
3
2021
entrez:
11
12
2020
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Although cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are among the leading causes of death in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), prevention is not a priority and effective treatments are not widely available. This perspective discusses the burden, challenges, and potential opportunities for improvement of CVD prevention and control efforts in SSA. This paper focuses on ischemic heart disease and stroke, and their key contributors of obesity, hypertension, diabetes and dyslipidaemia which are well-established, rapidly rising, and significant contributors to disease burden in SSA. However, their prevention, detection, treatment and control of are currently disorganized, inconsistent, unreliable, and insufficient with most SSA countries not geared to respond to this growing problem. National policies are frequently lacking or, if available, remain poorly implemented, for the control of these conditions. Primary healthcare systems have not adapted to cope with these rising CVD burdens and remain weak, underfunded and under resourced. Numerous barriers at the healthcare service, healthcare provider, and patient levels prevent optimal CVD risk factor care. Innovative approaches such as task-shifting with the reallocation of care to lower-level healthcare workers and the potential use of inexpensive technological options should be encouraged to provide equitable CVD preventive and curative solutions to SSA's poor.
Identifiants
pubmed: 33305637
doi: 10.1080/14779072.2021.1855975
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Review
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM