| Literature DB >> 28330453 |
Jennifer Kane1, Megan Landes2,3, Christopher Carroll4, Amy Nolen2, Sumeet Sodhi2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic diseases, primarily cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease, diabetes and cancer, are the leading cause of death and disability worldwide. In sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where communicable disease prevalence still outweighs that of non-communicable disease (NCDs), rates of NCDs are rapidly rising and evidence for primary healthcare approaches for these emerging NCDs is needed.Entities:
Keywords: Non-communicable diseases; Prevention; Primary healthcare; Sub-Saharan Africa; Systematic review; Treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28330453 PMCID: PMC5363051 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-017-0613-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Inclusion criteria for the a priori framework models
| Setting/Population | Low and middle income countries |
|---|---|
| Program or intervention focus | Packages of primary care interventions for priority NCDs |
| Research type/Study design | Publications describing or testing model or framework |
| Exclusions | •Markov or economic model |
A priori framework with definitions of themes for coding
| Themes derived for coding | Definitions |
|---|---|
| Case finding | Passive screening for NCDs of patients presenting to local health facilities |
| Modify risk factors | Everyone seen in primary care should be assessed for common risk factors such as smoking, alcohol, obesity and counseled in lifestyle modifications |
| Standardized treatment | Algorithm protocol for which medications and dose for DM, asthma, COPD or HTN |
| Standardized diagnosis | Algorithm outlining protocol for making a diagnosis of DM, asthma, COPD or HTN |
| Standardized referral pathway | Algorithm with protocol for when to refer a patient needing more complex management to secondary or tertiary care |
| Standardized follow-up appointments | Guidelines outlining when patients should return for follow-up appointment, ensuring that pre-booked appointments are available at the clinic |
| Adherence support | Some form of support to patients for adherence to medication and follow up appointments at the clinic (i.e. text message reminder) |
| Task-shifting/Multidisciplinary clinic | NPC to have the primary role in screening, preventing and managing NCDs |
| Training of staff | Curriculum to train the health care staff delivering care for NCDs management |
| Decentralized care | Primary care clinics should be available and accessible to patients living in rural areas |
| Essential medicines | Consistent supply and access to medicines needed to treat NCDs, primarily drugs outlined in treatment algorithm so that treatment is not interrupted |
| Essential diagnostics | Essential equipment needed to follow diagnostic protocol for screening and follow-up of NCDs |
| Systematic monitoring and evaluation | Efficient system for data collection of NCDs (of key indicators such as number died, lost to follow-up, stopped treatment or referral) |
NCD non-communicable diseases, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, HTN hypertension, NPC non-physician clinician
Inclusion criteria for the primary research studies
| Setting/Population | Sub-Saharan Africa |
|---|---|
| Program or Intervention Focus | Packages of primary care interventions for priority NCDs |
| Research type /Study design | Quantitative and qualitative research studies describing intervention or development of package of care |
| Exclusions | •Interventions solely base on health promotion – intervention must include medical management of diseases |
NCD non-communicable disease, CVD cardiovascular disease, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, DM diabetes mellitus
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart detailing results of literature search and study screening of Primary Research Studies
Description of primary research studies
| Article | NCD Focus | Study Design | Location | Intervention | Outcome | Qualitya |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pastakia 2013 | DM & HTN | Feasibility study | Rural Kenya | Community vs. home based screening | Low follow up at health center, HTN 31%, DM 22–23% follow within 3 months | Adequate |
| Rabkin. 2012 | DM | Pre/post intervention | Urban Ethiopia | Protocol of DM care implemented for HIV patients | Increase BP measurements, fundoscopy exams, booked next appointment after intervention | Adequate |
| Chamie 2011 | DM & HTN | Feasibility study | Rural Uganda | POC testing for NCD screening alongside HIV testing campaign | Moderate follow up at health center, HTN 43% and DM 61% a health center | Adequate |
| Price 2011 | DM | Observational cohort study | Rural South Africa | Empowerment based education about DM, clinical algorithm | Hba1c at baseline 10.8, decreased to 7.5 at 18 months, 9.7 at 4 years | Adequate |
| Bloomfield 2013 | CVD & Pulmonary | Program description | Rural Kenya | Twining relationship for academic model for NCD clinical care | No evaluation phase yet, description of model for academic partnership | Adequate |
| Mendis 2010 | HTN | Cluster Randomized trial | Urban/rural Nigeria | WHO CVD risk management package vs. standard care for HTN | SBP and DBP were lower in Nigerian group (p = 0.0002), 2% of patients referred to next level of care, decreased BMI, smoking, increased fruits and vegetables | Adequate |
| Labhart 2010 | HTN & DM | Observational cohort study | Rural Cameroon | Implementation of package of care for HTN/DM for NPC (75 clinics) | Retention of patients at 1 year 18.1%, SBP decreased 22.8 mmHg/DBP decreased 12.4 mmHg/FPG decreased by 3.4 mmol/L ( | Adequate |
| Kengne 2009 | HTN, DM & asthma | Feasibility study | Urban/rural Cameroon | Implementation of package of care for HTN/DM/asthma at PHC (5 clinics) | Decrease of SBP 11.7 and DBP 7.8 ( | Adequate |
| Katz 2009 | DM & HTN | Observational cohort study | Urban/rural South Africa | Chronic care model clinic for DM and HTN implemented | Half lost to follow up (49%), 55% of DM patient referred to specialist clinic (76% of these didn’t need referral), 31% of DM controlled with hba1c <7% | Adequate |
| Bovet 2008 | HTN | Prospective population based survey | Urban Tanzania | Health care services after positive screening test for HTN | 34% sought health-care provider in 12-mth period, anti-HTN taken by 34% at some point, 3% at end of 12 month follow-up | Adequate |
| Mamo 2007 | DM | Program description | Rural Ethiopia | Implementation of RN-led decentralized NCD clinics | 75% of DM patients attended FU appointments, only 11.4% of DM patients could be transferred to PHC clinics because lack of insulin supply at PHC | Adequate |
| Coleman 1998 | HTN, DM & Asthma | Observational cohort study | Rural South Africa | Implementation of RN-led NCD package of care intervention | RN’s able to control 68% of HTN, 82% of DM (NIDDM), 84% of those with asthma | Adequate |
aIf a paper had >50% of the CASP and MMAT checklist then the study was deemed of adequate quality assessment
A Priori themes in primary research studies for NCDs interventions in SSA
Is framework theme present in the model in an included study? Grey = Yes, White = Unclear; Light Grey = No
A Priori themes in primary research studies for NCDs interventions in SSA
Is framework theme present in the model in an included study? Green = Yes; White = Unclear; Light Grey = No
A priori including the new concepts and themes
| A priori concepts | New concepts | A priori themes | Revised and new themes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Screening | Case finding | ||
| Prevention | Modify risk factors | ||
| Control | Quality improvement | Review criteria | |
| Staff competence | |||
| Health systems | Essential medicines | ||
| Essential diagnostics | |||
| Systematic monitoring and evaluation | |||
| Decentralized care | |||
| Decision support | Standardized treatment | Adherence to medications | |
| Standardized diagnosis | Adherence to follow-up | ||
| Standardized referral pathway | Communication with MD/specialist | ||
| Standardized follow-up appointments | |||
| Human Resources | Task-shifting/Multidisciplinary clinic | Train and retrain staff | |
| Dedicated NCD staff |