African experiences in non- communicable diseases BGS Spring meeting 28 April 2017 Professor Richard Walker Consultant Physician and Honorary Professor of Ageing and International Health Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust/Institute of Health and Society, Newcastle University BGS Spring 2017
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African experiences in non-communicable diseases
BGS Spring meeting
28 April 2017
Professor Richard Walker Consultant Physician and Honorary Professor of Ageing and
International Health
Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust/Institute of Health and Society, Newcastle University
BGS Spring
2017
Presentation outline • The aging population in low and middle
income countries (LMIC) • Conducting epidemiological research in Africa
– stroke as an example • Interventions for non-communicable disease
(NCD) in Africa – Parkinson’s disease (PD) as an example
• Health beliefs and how these effect health seeking behavior
• Geriatrics and the role of geriatricians in Africa BGS Spri
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Background • Nearly 2/3 of the world’s population > 60 years live in developing countries, and this population is growing at 2.27% per annum (faster than the growth in the general population)1
• In 2010 10 million of these lived in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), with 139 million predicted by 2050
•Nigeria is expected to have a very large rise in the number of >75 years - increase of 526% from 1980 to 2025
1 United Nations world population prospects (2013) BGS Spri
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Recent changes in life expectancy
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Mortality
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Non-communicable diseases
• World-wide, by 2030, the 10 diseases
causing the most disability-adjusted life years in low-income countries will include depression, IHD, stroke and cataracts
• UN high level meeting 2011: governments worldwide must plan to reduce risk factors for non-communicable disease BGS Spri
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Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)
• Formulated in 2015 to follow on from Millennium Development Goals which did not mention the elderly or NCDS
• SDG3 “Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages”
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The burden of stroke in population
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Presenter
Presentation Notes
Table of risk factor: hypertension
Stroke mortality • Stroke mortality rises rapidly with age.1
• In industrialised countries stroke is the third leading cause of death (10-12% of all deaths) - 88% are over 65 years.
• Stroke mortality in the US is significantly higher in African Americans than in caucasians.2
1 Bonita et al. 1992 Population Based Studies of Stroke pp. 1-30
2 Gillum RF 1999 Stroke 30 1711-1715 BGS Spring
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Incidence - developed countries
• 2/1000/year - increases steeply with age.
• 75% are first-ever strokes. • TIA incidence = 25% of stroke
incidence. • US African Americans compared to US
caucasians: – 35-74 years - 2 times. – 33-44 years - 3-4 times.
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Incidence - Harare • First-ever strokes in blacks resident in Harare
from reviewing hospital admissions and post mortem register for 19911.
• 273 cases (142 men and 131 women). • Total crude incidence rate per 100,000 = 30.7
(29.7 for men and 32 for women). • 96 (35%) died within the first week.
1 Matenga 1997 S A M J 87 606-609 BGS Spring
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Trends in stroke admissions at KCMC, Tanzania1
• Medical records audited for the years 1974-76, 1984-86, 1994-95 and 2008
• All inpatients with a primary diagnosis of stroke • Data collected - age, sex, stroke sub-type,
predominant side of symptoms and survival to discharge
• Number of admissions annually rose from mean of 1.3 for years 1974-75 to 153 in 2008 with increase in mean age and proportion of females
Richard Walker et al. Tropical Medicine and International Health 2015 (in press)
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Age and sex distribution of stroke
admissions to Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre during the years studied
E & W 180 (178 – 182) 115 (106 – 124) 126 (121 – 132) 8.6 (7.9 – 9.3) BGS Spring
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Place of death for people dying from stroke in Dar-es-Salaam, Hai district and Morogoro rural district
Area Hospital Home Other Total
No % No % No %
Dar-es-Salaam 31 (30) 68 (65) 5 (5) 104
Hai 133 (56) 101 (43) 1 (1) 235
Morogoro 10 (12) 71 (85) 1 (2) 82
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Prevalence of stroke with residual impairment – Tanzania • Rural population of 148,135 in Kilimanjaro region1 • House-to-house survey • Crude prevalence for those aged 15 and over
(85,152) was 127 (155 for men and 103 for women) • Prevalence for those aged 55 and over was 566 (623
for men and 510 for women) • More than half had never had their blood pressure
measured prior to stroke
1Walker RW et al. 2000 JNNP 68 (6): 744-749
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Tanzanian Stroke Incidence Project
• All incident strokes in Hai and Dar-es-Salaam AMMP project areas
• History, examination, blood tests, DNA, ECG, echocardiogram and CT head scan
• Follow up at 1 month and 6 months • Two age and sex matched controls from
AMMP database for each patient - all investigations except CT head scan BGS Spri
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Richard Walker, David Whiting, Nigel Unwin, Ferdinand Mugusi, Mark Swai,
Eric Aris, Ahmed Jusabani, Gregory Kabadi, William K. Gray, Mary Lewanga,
George Alberti. Stroke incidence in urban and rural Tanzania.
Lancet Neurology 2010 9, 786-792
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Comparison of age-specific stroke rates for those ≥ 45 years in Hai, Dar-es-Salaam and African-Americans in
Northern Manhattan
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Aetiology in Africa
Author Publication Country Type of study No. of strokes
No. of CT scans
PICH (%)
Infarct (%) [emboli]*
Matenga et al.
1986 Zimbabwe Prospective 93 80 31 69
Rosman 1986 RSA Prospective 116 92 33 67 [14]
Joubert 1991 RSA Prospective 250 250 29 71 [24]
Nyame et al.
1998 Ghana Retrospective 907 907 60 40
*As percentage of total number of strokes
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Aetiology in Africa
Author Publication Country Type of study No. of strokes
No. of CT scans
PICH (%)
Infarct (%) [emboli]*
Matenga et al
1986 Zimbabwe Prospective 93 80 31 69
Rosman 1986 RSA Prospective 116 92 33 67 [14]
Joubert 1991 RSA Prospective 250 250 29 71 [24]
Nyame et al
1998 Ghana Retrospective 907 907 60 40
Walker et al
2011 Tanzania Prospective 18 82
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Carotid ultrasound • Duplex ultrasound scan • Consecutive Hai patients in final year of
study1 • 1/56 (56 year old woman) had 50% right
internal carotid artery stenosis • 55/56 showed no evidence of stenosis of
common or internal carotid arteries
A Jusabani et al. Post-stroke carotid ultrasound findings from an incident Tanzanian population. Neuroepidemiology 2011 ; 37 (3-4): 245-248 BGS Spri
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Risk factors • 2 age - and sex – matched community-based
controls recruited for each stroke patient1 • Risk factors similar at both sites • Significant independent risk factors for stroke:
previous cardiac event (OR 7.39, 95% CI 2.42 – 22.53), HIV infection 5.61 (2.41 – 31.09), high ratio of total cholesterol to HDL cholesterol 4.54 (2.49 – 8.28), smoking 2.72 (1.49 – 4.96) and hypertension 2.14 (1.09 – 4.17), all p < 0.001
R Walker et al. Stroke risk factors in an incident population in urban and rural Tanzania: a prospective, community-based case-control study. Lancet Global Health, volume 1, Issue 5, pages e282-e288, November 2013. BGS Spri
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Kaplan – Meier survival curve (> 7 years)1
Walker RW et al. Case-fatality and disability in the Tanzanian Stroke Incidence Project cohort. Acta Neurol Scand. 2015 (published online May 5th)
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Cause (Dar) • Stroke widely understood to be caused by
demons • Many also reported that stroke is caused by
witchcraft (kulogwa) – Jealousy of property or progress is the main
motivating factor for stroke related witchcraft
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“Stroke cause is similar to convulsions…we say it is mdudu (insect)...we say it is an animal…meaning it is a bad devil or in other formal language it is a demon…when it attacks you, it either stays in all your body part, legs and arms or in one part of your body” [65 years old male stroke patient]
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Cause of elderly medical admissions in Africa1
• All emergency medical admissions of people aged 60 years and over
• Federal Medical Centre, Idi Abba, Abeokuta, Nigeria, Soba University Hospital, Khartoum, Sudan and KCMC, Tanzania
• 6 months from 1 March to 31 August 2012 • Main cause of admission along with
secondary causes listed
Akinyemi et al Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 2014
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Reasons for admissions to sites in Africa in those aged over 65 years
Nigeria (n=152) Sudan (n=364) Tanzania (n=358) Non-communicable disease
Who looks after older people in African hospitals?
• 25/43 African countries surveyed had
no geriatricians1 • Yet, most SSA medical schools do not
teach geriatrics (5/40 countries) • There are few specialty training
schemes in Africa for geriatrics (7/40 countries)
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Geriatricians in Africa • Replies from 40/54 countries (74%) • Data were obtained via an internet search
for a further three countries • Out of 43, 25 countries had no
geriatricians • 35/40 countries had no formal
undergraduate training for medical students on geriatrics
• 33/40 countries reported no national postgraduate training scheme for geriatrics
Dotchin et al Age and Ageing 2012 BGS Spri
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Survey of Geriatricians in Africa
Map (1): Map of Africa with shading representing number of geriatricians per country
Blue=0 Yellow=1-4
Light orange=5-9 Orange=10-100
Red=>100 White=no data
Map 2: African countries by World Bank Human Development Index
Key: blue = least developed, red = most
developed
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Nigeria (lower middle income)
• Population: 173.6 million • Life expectancy at birth: 52 • Population aged over 65 years: 5.2 million
(3%) • 218,736 deaths annually due to stroke, with
28-40% dead within 30 days • < 50 neurologists in the whole country • 1-4 geriatricians in the whole country
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Parkinson’s disease
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Screening questions 1. Do your arms or legs shake, except after drinking
alcohol? 2. Do you shuffle or take tiny steps when you walk? 3. Have you ever been told you have Parkinson’s
disease? 4. Do you have difficulty standing up or fall easily apart
from maybe when drinking alcohol? 5. Do you walk more slowly than other people your
age? 6. Does your head shake? BGS Spri
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Results • 33 patients with PD • All consented to take part in the study • Crude prevalence rate of PD = 20/100,000 • Age-standardised to UK population =
40/100,000 (males 63.5/100,000) • Male to female ratio = 2.3:1 • Mean age 74.5 years (range 38-94) • Mean duration of disease 5 years (0.25-19) • Median Hoehn and Yahr score 3 (2-5)
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Results continued
• No on treatment at time of study = 3/33 • No ever received treatment = 5/33 • No previously diagnosed = 8/33 • Treatments received: Benzhexol,
Sinemet • Traditional medications used by some • None had physiotherapy, occupational
therapy or speech and language input BGS Spring
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Beliefs1 • Many believe it is not a medical problem • Normal part of ageing process • Caused by evil spirits, witchcraft etc –
patients seek help from traditional healers
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Physiotherapy
• Cueing intervention with metronome brooch for all mobile patients giving consent
• Intervention acceptable to most patients • Excellent response in some individuals • How sustainable?
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Results: Effect of therapeutic cueing
Outcome Change P value Step length 0.7 m <.0001 Speed 0.17 m/s <.0001 Step frequency
7.8 steps/min 0.046
UPDRS III 6 0.004
Therapeutic cueing improved • Walking • Motor severity • ADL • Similar results for dual task gait
Rochester et al Movement Disorders 2010 BGS Spring
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Also measured prevalence of
• Epilepsy • Neurological disability in those aged 70
• Contributes to 57 million (3.7% total) disability adjusted life years, and 7.5 million (12.8%) premature deaths annually1
• Most powerful modifiable risk factor for ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke
• Often asymptomatic – shortfall between levels of detection, treatment and control BGS Spri
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Methods1 • 12 randomly-selected villages in the Hai district
stratified for highland and lowland • All consenting individuals aged 70 years and over • 3 consecutive sitting blood pressure (BP)
measurements • Average of last 2 measurements taken • Prior diagnosis of, and treatment for, hypertension
recorded
• Dewhurst et al, The high prevalence of hypertension in rural-dwelling Tanzanian older adults and the disparity between detection, treatment and control: A rule of sixths? Journal of Human Hypertension 2013 Jun; 27(6):374-80 BGS Spri
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Rule of sixths
• 2/6 of hypertensives previously detected • 1/6 of those previously detected were on
treatment • 1/6 of those on treatment were adequately