Literature DB >> 9469247

An evaluation of clinical laboratory services in sub-Saharan Africa. Ex africa semper aliquid novi?

I P Gray1, J Y Carter.   

Abstract

Pathology services represent the rational, scientific basis of the practice of clinical care. It does not represent deus ex machina, an implausible solution to a complex plot, but rather the way in which clinical care can be audited, controlled, guided and kept appropriate to the funds and the skills available. Arguments are presented to support this statement as well as to analyse what is wrong with health care, from the point of view of laboratory medicine, in sub-Saharan Africa. In most African countries 'first world' technology has to be imported by economies barely able to sustain the basic requirements of human life. Badly needed foreign exchange is obtained by growing export crops at the cost of traditional lifestyle, disenfranchising communities, urbanisation, and even at the cost not being able to grow food. War, corruption, lack of accountability even in the Western sense of being able to go to the polls every so often, lack of empowerment, low literacy rate etc all debase the communities, with minimal exceptions, of Africa. Health care is under the same capricious rule as all other public services: investment in laboratories is poor and most have no access to a professional laboratory at all. More investment, not less; expansion of pathology services not restricting them, is needed throughout the continent.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9469247     DOI: 10.1016/s0009-8981(97)00180-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Chim Acta        ISSN: 0009-8981            Impact factor:   3.786


  6 in total

1.  Survey of Clinical and Anatomic Pathology Laboratory Infrastructure in Mozambique.

Authors:  Mamudo R Ismail; Emília V Noormahomed; Shaun Lawicki; Quentin Eichbaum
Journal:  Am J Clin Pathol       Date:  2021-10-13       Impact factor: 2.493

2.  A situational analysis of antimicrobial drug resistance in Africa: are we losing the battle?

Authors:  Andrew Nyerere Kimang'a
Journal:  Ethiop J Health Sci       Date:  2012-07

3.  A Cross-Sectional Study to Assess Capacity of Health Facility Laboratories in Zone One of Afar Regional State, Ethiopia.

Authors:  Chalachew Genet Akal; Tesfaye Andualem
Journal:  J Trop Med       Date:  2018-08-08

4.  Capacity gaps in health facilities for case management of intestinal schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthiasis in Burundi.

Authors:  Paul Bizimana; Katja Polman; Jean-Pierre Van Geertruyden; Frédéric Nsabiyumva; Céline Ngenzebuhoro; Elvis Muhimpundu; Giuseppina Ortu
Journal:  Infect Dis Poverty       Date:  2018-07-04       Impact factor: 4.520

Review 5.  [The specialty of anesthesia outside Western medicine with special consideration of personal experience in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Mongolia].

Authors:  M Dünser; I Baelani; L Ganbold
Journal:  Anaesthesist       Date:  2006-02       Impact factor: 1.041

6.  A study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in Senegal.

Authors:  Anna Helena Van't Hoog; Aicha Sarr; Winny Koster; Louis Delorme; Souleymane Diallo; Jean Sakande; Constance Schultsz; Christophe Longuet; Ahmad Iyane Sow; Pascale Ondoa
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-01-09       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.