International Society of Nephrology Global Kidney Health Atlas: structures, organization, and services for the management of kidney failure in South Asia

IF 19.3 2区 医学 Q1 UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY Kidney International Supplements Pub Date : 2021-05-01 DOI:10.1016/j.kisu.2021.01.006
Smita S. Divyaveer , Raja Ramachandran , Manisha Sahay , Dibya Singh Shah , Fazal Akhtar , Aminu K. Bello , Arpana Iyengar , David W. Johnson , David C.H. Harris , Adeera Levin , Meaghan Lunney , Muhibur Rahman , Harun-Ur Rashid , Syed Saad , Deenaz Zaidi , Mohamed A. Osman , Santosh Varughese , Eranga S. Wijewickrama , Maryam Khan , Feng Ye , Vivekanand Jha
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Information about disease burden and the available infrastructure and workforce to care for patients with kidney disease was collected for the second edition of the International Society of Nephrology Global Kidney Health Atlas. This paper presents findings for the 8 countries in the South Asia region. The World Bank categorizes Afghanistan and Nepal as low-income; Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, and Pakistan as lower-middle-income; and Sri Lanka and the Maldives as upper-middle-income countries. The prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in South Asia ranged from 5.01% to 13.24%. Long-term hemodialysis and long-term peritoneal dialysis are available in all countries, but Afghanistan lacks peritoneal dialysis services. Kidney transplantation was available in all countries except Bhutan and Maldives. Hemodialysis was the dominant modality of long-term dialysis, peritoneal dialysis was more expensive than hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation overwhelmingly depended on living donors. Bhutan provided public funding for kidney replacement therapy (dialysis and transplantation); Sri Lanka, India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh had variable funding mechanisms; and Afghanistan relied solely on out-of-pocket expenditure. There were shortages of health care personnel across the entire region. Reporting was variable: Afghanistan and Sri Lanka have dialysis registries but publish no reports, whereas Bangladesh has a transplant registry. South Asia has a large, but poorly documented burden of CKD. Diabetes and hypertension are the major causes of CKD throughout the region with a higher prevalence of infectious causes in Afghanistan and a high burden of CKD of an unknown cause in Sri Lanka and parts of India. The extent and quality of care delivery is suboptimal and variable. Sustainable strategies need to be developed to address the growing burden of CKD in the region.

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国际肾脏病学会全球肾脏健康地图集:南亚肾衰竭管理的结构、组织和服务
国际肾脏病学会全球肾脏健康地图集第二版收集了有关疾病负担和现有基础设施和人力资源的信息,以照顾肾病患者。本文介绍了南亚地区8个国家的调查结果。世界银行将阿富汗和尼泊尔列为低收入国家;孟加拉国、不丹、印度和巴基斯坦属于中低收入;斯里兰卡和马尔代夫被列为中高收入国家。慢性肾脏疾病(CKD)在南亚的患病率从5.01%到13.24%不等。所有国家都有长期血液透析和长期腹膜透析,但阿富汗缺乏腹膜透析服务。除不丹和马尔代夫外,所有国家都可以进行肾移植。血液透析是长期透析的主要方式,腹膜透析比血液透析更昂贵,肾移植绝大多数依赖活体供体。不丹为肾脏替代疗法(透析和移植)提供公共资金;斯里兰卡、印度、巴基斯坦和孟加拉国的筹资机制各不相同;阿富汗则完全依赖自掏腰包。整个地区都缺乏保健人员。报告情况各不相同:阿富汗和斯里兰卡有透析登记,但没有公布任何报告,而孟加拉国有移植登记。南亚有很大的慢性肾病负担,但文献很少。糖尿病和高血压是整个地区CKD的主要原因,在阿富汗,感染性原因的患病率较高,在斯里兰卡和印度部分地区,不明原因的CKD负担很高。医疗服务的范围和质量是次优和可变的。需要制定可持续的战略来解决该地区CKD日益增加的负担。
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来源期刊
Kidney International Supplements
Kidney International Supplements UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY-
CiteScore
11.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: Kidney International Supplements is published on behalf of the International Society of Nephrology (ISN) and comes complimentary as part of a subscription to Kidney International. Kidney International Supplements is a peer-reviewed journal whose focus is sponsored, topical content of interest to the nephrology community.
期刊最新文献
Editorial Board Table of Contents Variations in kidney care management and access: regional assessments of the 2023 International Society of Nephrology Global Kidney Health Atlas (ISN-GKHA) Update on variability in organization and structures of kidney care across world regions Capacity for the management of kidney failure in the International Society of Nephrology Newly Independent States and Russia region: report from the 2023 ISN Global Kidney Health Atlas (ISN-GKHA)
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