Abstract

This paper aims to highlight the challenges in managing liver diseases in Ghana and the efforts needed to improve services to help curb the high rate of liver mortality in the young adults. Ghana is a rising, middle-income West African country with well-established administrative systems for healthcare, albeit with hospitals lacking modern equipment and being devoid of infrastructure for sophisticated interventional procedures. Although liver disease is common, due to the high prevalence of chronic viral hepatitis B and C infection, antiviral drugs are commonly unavailable, even in the rare instances where they can be afforded. Hospital wards and outpatient clinics are usually over-crowded with long waiting times and limited doctor-patient time interaction. Treatment for end-stage liver disease can be a challenge, with limited endoscopic services, which are centered in the big cities and with expertise which is not widespread. The training program in endoscopic therapies by the Mayo Clinic (Rochester, Minnesota, USA), with faculty coming to Ghana to disseminate practical skills during a “training of trainers” program has gone a long way spreading the knowledge of managing life-threatening complications, such as variceal hemorrhage, albeit on a small scale in national terms. Collaboration between institutions from well-resourced and poorly-resourced countries exemplifies how such partnerships can go a long way in helping to support local training needs and the development of transferrable skills. Such partnerships may effectively provide healthcare workers with adequate training, with hepatology treatment protocols that are adapted to the local environment and thus allowing contextualisation of generic guidelines from the developed world and making them applicable to local settings.

Highlights

  • Ghana is a low middle-income country in West Africa and in the colonial era, it was known as the Gold Coast, a name that harked back to the great Asante kingdom, based around the Central Ghanaian city of Kumasi

  • The World Bank income classification declared Ghana as a lower middle income country (LMIC) in 2013 with about 24.2% of the population living below the poverty line [3]

  • The country has a relatively high literacy rate for a developing country. Given that it is well-endowed with natural resources, compared to most West African countries, Ghanas per capita economic output is higher than almost all its sub-Saharan counterparts

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Summary

Introduction

Epidemiological studies have shown that chronic viral hepatitis B (CHB) is hyper endemic in subSaharan Africa and some parts of Asia with a prevalence rate ranging from 5-10% of the adult population and this is a particular problem in West African countries, such as Ghana [4]. In Ghana viral hepatitis is known to be more prevalent than human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), leading to significant morbidity and mortality in terms of potentially avoidable liver disease.

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