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Impact of National Economy and Policies on End-Stage Kidney Care in South Asia and Southeast Asia

Authors :
Suceena Alexander
Sanjiv Jasuja
Maurizio Gallieni
Manisha Sahay
Devender S. Rana
Vivekanand Jha
Shalini Verma
Raja Ramachandran
Vinant Bhargava
Gaurav Sagar
Anupam Bahl
Mamun Mostafi
Jayakrishnan K Pisharam
Sydney C. W. Tang
Chakko Jacob
Atma Gunawan
Goh B. Leong
Khin T. Thwin
Rajendra K Agrawal
Kriengsak Vareesangthip
Roberto Tanchanco
Lina H. L. Choong
Chula Herath
Chih C. Lin
Nguyen T. Cuong
Ha P. Haian
Syed F Akhtar
Ali Alsahow
Mohan M. Rajapurkar
Vijay Kher
Hemant Mehta
Anil K. Bhalla
Umesh B. Khanna
Deepak S. Ray
Sonika Puri
Himanshu Jain
Aida Lydia
Tushar Vachharajani
Source :
International Journal of Nephrology, Vol 2021 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2021.

Abstract

Background. The association between economic status and kidney disease is incompletely explored even in countries with higher economy (HE); the situation is complex in lower economies (LE) of South Asia and Southeast Asia (SA and SEA). Methods. Fifteen countries of SA and SEA categorized as HE and LE, represented by the representatives of the national nephrology societies, participated in this questionnaire and interview-based assessment of the impact of economic status on renal care. Results. Average incidence and prevalence of end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) per million population (pmp) are 1.8 times and 3.3 times higher in HE. Hemodialysis is the main renal replacement therapy (RRT) (HE-68%, LE-63%). Funding of dialysis in HE is mainly by state (65%) or insurance bodies (30%); out of pocket expenses (OOPE) are high in LE (41%). Highest cost for hemodialysis is in Brunei and Singapore, and lowest in Myanmar and Nepal. Median number of dialysis machines/1000 ESKD population is 110 in HE and 53 in LE. Average number of machines/dialysis units in HE is 2.7 times higher than LE. The HE countries have 9 times more dialysis centers pmp (median HE-17, LE-02) and 16 times more nephrologist density (median HE-14.8 ppm, LE-0.94 ppm). Dialysis sessions >2/week is frequently followed in HE (84%) and 10% in all the HE countries except Taiwan, 10%–20% in the majority of LE countries. Conclusion. Economic disparity in SA and SEA is reflected by poor dialysis infrastructure and penetration, inadequate manpower, higher OOPE, higher dialysis dropout rates, and lesser renal transplantations in LE countries. Utility of RRT can be improved by state funding and better insurance coverage.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2090214X and 20902158
Volume :
2021
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
International Journal of Nephrology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.10d48738a00041b5a98dfcd32fdaffd8
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/6665901