Abstract

The literature on the global burden of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) contrasts a spiraling epidemic centered in low-income countries with low levels of awareness, risk factor control, infrastructure, personnel and funding. There are few data-based reports of broad and interconnected strategies to address these challenges where they hit hardest. Kisoro district in Southwest Uganda is rural, remote, over-populated and poor, the majority of its population working as subsistence farmers. This paper describes the 10-year experience of a tri-partite collaboration between Kisoro District Hospital, a New York teaching hospital, and a US-based NGO delivering hypertension services to the district. Using data from patient and pharmacy registers and a random sample of charts reviewed manually, we describe both common and often-overlooked barriers to quality care (clinic overcrowding, drug stockouts, provider shortages, visit non-adherence, and uninformative medical records) and strategies adopted to address these barriers (locally-adapted treatment guidelines, patient-clinic-pharmacy cost sharing, appointment systems, workforce development, patient-provider continuity initiatives, and ongoing data monitoring). We find that: 1) although following CVD risk-based treatment guidelines could safely allocate scarce medications to the highest-risk patients first, national guidelines emphasizing treatment at blood pressures over 140/90 mmHg ignore the reality of “stockouts” and conflict with this goal; 2) often-overlooked barriers to quality care such as poor quality medical records, clinic disorganization and local employment practices are surmountable; 3) cost-sharing initiatives partially fill the gap during stockouts of government supplied medications, but still may be insufficient for the poorest patients; 4) frequent prolonged lapses in care may be the norm for most known hypertensives in rural SSA, and 5) ongoing data monitoring can identify local barriers to quality care and provide the impetus to ameliorate them. We anticipate that our 10-year experience adapting to the complex challenges of hypertension management and a granular description of the solutions we devised will be of benefit to others managing chronic disease in similar rural African communities.

Highlights

  • The global burden of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) is immense and growing

  • With differences likely dampened by the clinic’s high frequency of ward discharges, in comparison to their village-dwelling Care Clinic (CCC) counterparts, patients from town are more often overweight (39% vs 32%), obese (21 vs 15%) and diabetic (27 vs 20%). 5% of the patients have comorbid heart failure (CHF), primarily from hypertension, and fewer than 1% have been diagnosed with ischemic heart disease clinically

  • This paper offers a data-informed, granular account of one district hospital’s attempt to manage hypertension in rural Africa—a mosaic of the challenges faced, strategies implemented, and results achieved in a typical region with few resources

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Summary

Introduction

The global burden of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) is immense and growing. In 2012, NCDs, primarily cardiovascular diseases, cancer and chronic respiratory disease, were responsible for 68% of deaths worldwide with hypertension the largest modifiable risk for disease[1,2,3]. In Uganda, as in the rest of SSA, paramount among the many barriers to effective NCD management are underfunding, workforce shortages, long wait times, provider knowledge deficits, poor infrastructure, lack of access to affordable medications, and expense of transport [5, 8,9,10,11,12]. These systems issues are compounded by patient conceptions of hypertension that affect health seeking behaviors [11]. Most non-M.D. providers had little confidence in managing NCDs. 75% of clinical officers (non-MDs similar to physician assistants) and 31% of medical officers (M.D. with 1 post-graduate year of generalist training) felt their clinical training did not adequately prepare them to manage hypertension [14]

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