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

Authors :
Divyaveer SS
Ramachandran R
Sahay M
Singh Shah D
Akhtar F
Bello AK
Iyengar A
Johnson DW
Harris DCH
Levin A
Lunney M
Rahman M
Rashid HU
Saad S
Zaidi D
Osman MA
Varughese S
Wijewickrama ES
Khan M
Ye F
Tonelli M
Okpechi IG
Jha V
Source :
Kidney international supplements [Kidney Int Suppl (2011)] 2021 May; Vol. 11 (2), pp. e97-e105. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Apr 12.
Publication Year :
2021

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.<br /> (© 2021 International Society of Nephrology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2157-1724
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Kidney international supplements
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33981475
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.kisu.2021.01.006