| Literature DB >> 35178147 |
Teresa Cherop Lotodo1,2, Beatrice Jepngetich Melly2,3, Kelvin Mogesa Manyega4, Mercy Oduor2, Valerie Magutu5, Fredrick Chite Asirwa6, Riyat Malkit7, Alfred Karagu8, Simon Onsongo9, Caroline Wafula10, Roselyne Yatich3, Pravas Chandra Mishra11, Austin Omondi2, Diana Flora Namaemba2, Yvette Oyollo2, Maureen Kugo2.
Abstract
The rising burden of multiple myeloma in Kenya has not been met by a commensurate effort for control. Patients and practitioners struggle with unavailability and unaffordability of diagnostics, drugs and stem cell transplant leading to presentation at advanced stages and under-treatment with increased morbidities and mortality. A concerted effort among stakeholders is urgently needed to develop strategies for myeloma control. The scarcity of providers also carries grave consequences for Kenyan patients. The Academic Model Providing Access To Healthcare (AMPATH) multiple myeloma program organized the Inaugural Virtual Multiple Myeloma Congress to achieve both interactive specialist instruction and stakeholder engagement. Expert presenters and panellists from diverse disciplines were invited to offer in-depth presentations on myeloma care and case studies from panellists´ practice were used to contextualize learning points and form a basis for generating debate on the challenges facing providers and opportunities for care improvement. An audience of health professionals offering care to myeloma patients was invited. The underlying principle of recommendations developed during the congress was collaboration among in-country and international practitioners, researchers and policy experts from private and public sector. This partnership of stakeholders bears the potential of pooling scarce resources and for collective advocacy towards better patient care. Copyright: Teresa Cherop Lotodo et al.Entities:
Keywords: Kenya; Multiple myeloma; medical education; stakeholder participation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35178147 PMCID: PMC8817190 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2021.40.236.30742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
participants of the Inaugural Virtual Multiple Myeloma Congress 2020
| Professional category | Frequency | Percent |
|---|---|---|
| Medical officer/registrar/resident/physician | 34 | 25.2 |
| Pharmacist/oncology pharmacist/clinical pharmacist | 20 | 14.8 |
| Nurse/clinical research nurse/oncology nurse | 16 | 11.9 |
| Clinical officer/clinical officer-oncology | 14 | 10.4 |
| Lecturers | 10 | 7.4 |
| General pathologist/clinical pathologist | 9 | 6.7 |
| Administrators (ministry of health, non-government, hospital) | 8 | 5.9 |
| Oncologists (medical/radiation) | 8 | 5.9 |
| Haematologists | 6 | 4.4 |
| Others (social workers, biostatisticians, laboratory scientists, health records and information managers) | 6 | 4.4 |
| Pharmaceutical technologist | 4 | 3.0 |
| Total | 135 | 100.0 |
institutions represented at the Inaugural Virtual Multiple Myeloma Congress 2020
| Institution type | Sectorial affiliation | Institution name |
|---|---|---|
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| Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital | ||
| Kenyatta National Hospital | ||
| Kenyatta University Teaching and Referral Hospital | ||
| Jaramogi Oginga Odinga Teaching and Referral Hospital | ||
| Coast General Hospital | ||
| Nakuru County Referral Hospital | ||
| Kakamega County Referral Hospital | ||
| Nyeri County Referral Hospital | ||
| Embu Level 5 Hospital | ||
| Longisa County Referral Hospital | ||
| Migori County Referral Hospital | ||
| Kapsabet County Referral Hospital | ||
| Kitale County Hospital | ||
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| The Mater Hospital | ||
| Tenwek Mission Hospital | ||
| AIC Kijabe Mission Hospital | ||
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| Nairobi Hospital | ||
| Aga Khan University Hospital | ||
| MP Shah Hospital | ||
| Metropolitan Hospital, Nairobi | ||
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| Max Super Specialty Hospital, New Delhi, India | ||
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| ScanLab | ||
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| Medipoint EA LTD | ||
| Philips Pharmaceuticals | ||
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| Moi University | ||
| University of Nairobi | ||
| Aga Khan University | ||
| Maseno University | ||
| Kenyatta University | ||
| University of Kabianga | ||
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| Indiana University | ||
| University of Zimbabwe | ||
| Alexandria University | ||
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| National Cancer Institute (NCI)-Kenya | ||
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| AMPATH | ||
| International Cancer Institute (ICI), Eldoret | ||
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| Kenya Clinical Officers Association (KCOA) |
AIC: Africa Inland Church, AMPATH: Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare
recommendations for improving myeloma care in Kenya
| 1 | Engender public-private partnerships as a means to providing access to advanced diagnostics and therapies (e.g. cytogenetics and stem cell transplant) to underserved communities |
| 2 | Government to facilitate infrastructure upgrade in selected tertiary and peripheral facilities of basic MM diagnostics such as SPEP, FLC and β2 microglobulin |
| 3 | Collaboration with international researchers with capacity for screening, MM biology and therapeutic trials |
| 4 | Focus on local operational research on clinical, HRQoL, economic outcomes and creative service delivery models |
| 5 | Aggregate clinical data form hospital-based MM registries for greater quality research |
| 6 | Local collaboration for research, resource sharing and collective advocacy in policy and fundraising |
| 7 | Engage pharmaceutical companies for differential pricing of drugs and/or patient assistance programs to increase affordability |
| 8 | Advocate for comprehensive insurance plans that cover diagnostics and adequate treatment of MM |
| 9 | NGOs already conducting MM training to support government efforts for decentralization of oncology services through capacity building for MM care |
| 10 | Conduct recurring congresses to build momentum for greater collaboration and take account of progress towards common goals |
MM: multiple myeloma; SPEP: serum protein electrophoresis; FLC: free light chain; HRQoL: health related quality of life; NGOs: non-governmental organizations