TRACK(由NEHEP)实施:孟加拉国情景

Abdul Kader Mohiuddin
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引用次数: 4

摘要

随着低收入和中等收入国家的非传染性疾病负担日益加重,生物风险因素,如高血糖症,已成为孟加拉国的一个主要公共卫生问题。迫切需要通过积极的生活方式改变来优化糖尿病管理,以预防合并症和并发症,从而降低成本。据《英国医学杂志》报道,糖尿病患者的住院天数是非糖尿病患者的2倍,门诊次数是非糖尿病患者的1.3倍,药物用量是非糖尿病患者的近10倍。令人惊讶的是,80%的富人病患者生活在低收入和中等收入国家。根据美国医学协会最近的一项研究,中国和印度总共有近1.1亿糖尿病患者。预计到2035年,该地区的糖尿病患病率将增加71%。孟加拉国在2010-2011年期间被列为糖尿病人口第8高的国家。在孟加拉国,2011年成人糖尿病患病率估计为9.7%,预计到2045年这一数字将达到1370万。在孟加拉国,糖尿病治疗的费用相当高,主要是由药品和住院费用驱动的。根据孟加拉国统计局的数据,2017年,2型糖尿病(T2DM)患者的年平均成本为864.7美元,占孟加拉国人均国内生产总值(GDP)的52%,是一般医疗保健成本的9.8倍。对于不住院的患者来说,药品是直接费用的最高来源(约85%)。在不久的将来,用于糖尿病治疗的私人和公共资金将受到严重限制,这对孟加拉国人口的健康构成威胁。
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TRACK (by NEHEP) Implementation: A Bangladesh Scenario
With the increasing burden of non-communicable diseases in Low-Income and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs), biological risk factors, such as hyperglycemia, are a major public health concern in Bangladesh. Optimization of diabetes management by positive lifestyle changes is urgently required for prevention of comorbidities and complications, which in turn will reduce the cost. Diabetes had 2 times more days of inpatient treatment, 1.3 times more outpatient visits, and nearly 10 times more medications than non-diabetes patients, as reported by British Medical Journal. And surprisingly, 80% of people with this so called Rich Man’s Disease live in low-and middle-income countries. According to a recent study of American Medical Association, China and India collectively are home of nearly 110 million diabetic patients. The prevalence of diabetes in this region is projected to increase by 71% by 2035. Bangladesh was ranked as the 8th highest diabetic populous country in the time period of 2010-2011. In Bangladesh, the estimated prevalence of diabetes among adults was 9.7% in 2011 and the number is projected to be 13.7 million by 2045. The cost of diabetes care is considerably high in Bangladesh, and it is primarily driven by the medicine and hospitalization costs. According to Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics, in 2017 the annual average cost per Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) was $864.7, which is 52% of per capita Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of Bangladesh and 9.8 times higher than the general health care cost. Medicine is the highest source of direct cost (around 85%) for patients without hospitalization. The private and public financing of diabetes treatment will be severely constrained in near future, representing a health threat for the Bangladeshi population.
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