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Integrating a diabetes and hypertension case management package within primary health care: a mixed methods feasibility study in Bangladesh

Almost three quarters of non-communicable disease (NCD) deaths, and 82% of premature NCD deaths, occur in low- and middle-income countries. Bangladesh has an estimated 7 million hypertensives and 10 million diabetics, and primary care is struggling to respond. Our aim was to develop and support impl...

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Published in:BMC health services research 2018-10, Vol.18 (1), p.811-811, Article 811
Main Authors: Huque, R, Nasreen, S, Ahmed, F, Hicks, J P, Walley, J, Newell, J N, Elsey, H
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description Almost three quarters of non-communicable disease (NCD) deaths, and 82% of premature NCD deaths, occur in low- and middle-income countries. Bangladesh has an estimated 7 million hypertensives and 10 million diabetics, and primary care is struggling to respond. Our aim was to develop and support implementation of a diabetes and hypertension case management package, and assess its appropriateness, feasibility and acceptability in two NCD clinics within two primary-care centres in Bangladesh. We used a convergent mixed methods design. We first assessed the level of appropriate hypertension and cardiovascular disease patient management, based on a composite outcome indicator using data from patients' treatment cards. Appropriate management was primarily informed by International Diabetes Federation (IDF) and World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines. We then performed qualitative in-depth interviews with doctors and patients to explain these quantitative findings and to understand the challenges to achieving appropriate patient management in the NCD clinics. Eighty-one newly diagnosed patients were recruited. Over 3 months, 53.1% (95% CI 42.3% to 63.6%) of patients were appropriately managed. We found incomplete diagnosis (especially missing hypertension diagnosis alongside diabetes) and non-provision of follow-up appointments were the main causes of the relatively low level of appropriate management. We conducted interviews with 11 patients and 8 health professionals and found a shortage of human resources, reporting materials, available drugs and diagnostic equipment. This undermined patients' willingness to attend clinics and doctors' willingness to offer follow-ups. Hands-on skill-building training was valuable in increasing doctors' competence for appropriate management, but was seen as a novel training method and faced constraints to implementation. A clinical guide, skill-based training and recording package can be implemented in routine primary care and can lead to appropriate management of around half of diabetic and hypertensive patients in a low-income country. However, considerable health systems challenges must be addressed before more patients can be managed appropriately.
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subjects Bangladesh
Cardiovascular disease
Care and treatment
Case management
Case Management - organization & administration
Chronic illnesses
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Clinical Competence - standards
Clinics
Delayed Diagnosis
Delivery of Health Care, Integrated - organization & administration
Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus
Diabetes Mellitus - therapy
Disease
Disease prevention
Drug Packaging
Drugs
Family planning
Feasibility Studies
Female
Health Personnel - education
Health Personnel - standards
Health services
Humans
Hypertension
Hypertension - therapy
Low income groups
Male
Management
Medical referrals
Mixed methods research
Non-communicable disease
Nurses
Patients
Physicians
Poverty
Prescription drugs
Primary care
Primary health care
Primary Health Care - organization & administration
Primary Health Care - standards
Public health
Skills
Systematic review
title Integrating a diabetes and hypertension case management package within primary health care: a mixed methods feasibility study in Bangladesh
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