Stokes Andrew, Berry Kaitlyn M, Mchiza Zandile, Parker Whadi-Ah, Labadarios Demetre, Chola Lumbwe, Hongoro Charles, Zuma Khangelani, Brennan Alana T, Rockers Peter C, Rosen Sydney
Department of Global Health, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, United Stated of America.
Population Health, Health Systems and Innovation, Human Sciences Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa.
PLoS One. 2017 Oct 2;12(10):e0184264. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184264. eCollection 2017.
South Africa faces an epidemic of chronic non-communicable diseases (NCDs), yet national surveillance is limited due to the lack of recent data. We used data from the first comprehensive national survey on NCDs-the South African National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (SANHANES-1 (2011-2012))-to evaluate the prevalence of and health system response to diabetes through a diabetes care cascade. We defined diabetes as a Hemoglobin A1c equal to or above 6.5% or currently on treatment for diabetes. We constructed a diabetes care cascade by categorizing the population with diabetes into those who were unscreened, screened but undiagnosed, diagnosed but untreated, treated but uncontrolled, and treated and controlled. We then used multivariable logistic regression models to explore factors associated with diagnosed and undiagnosed diabetes. The age-standardized prevalence of diabetes in South Africans aged 15+ was 10.1%. Prevalence rates were higher among the non-white population and among women. Among individuals with diabetes, a total of 45.4% were unscreened, 14.7% were screened but undiagnosed, 2.3% were diagnosed but untreated, 18.1% were treated but uncontrolled, and 19.4% were treated and controlled, suggesting that 80.6% of the diabetic population had unmet need for care. The diabetes care cascade revealed significant losses from lack of screening, between screening and diagnosis, and between treatment and control. These results point to significant unmet need for diabetes care in South Africa. Additionally, this analysis provides a benchmark for evaluating efforts to manage the rising burden of diabetes in South Africa.
南非面临慢性非传染性疾病(NCDs)的流行,但由于缺乏近期数据,国家监测有限。我们使用了首次关于非传染性疾病的全国综合调查——南非国家健康与营养检查调查(SANHANES-1(2011 - 2012年))的数据,通过糖尿病护理级联来评估糖尿病的患病率以及卫生系统对糖尿病的应对情况。我们将糖尿病定义为糖化血红蛋白等于或高于6.5%或目前正在接受糖尿病治疗。我们通过将糖尿病患者分为未筛查、筛查但未诊断、诊断但未治疗、治疗但未控制以及治疗且控制的人群来构建糖尿病护理级联。然后,我们使用多变量逻辑回归模型来探索与已诊断和未诊断糖尿病相关的因素。15岁及以上南非人的年龄标准化糖尿病患病率为10.1%。非白人人群和女性中的患病率更高。在糖尿病患者中,共有45.4%未接受筛查,14.7%接受了筛查但未被诊断,2.3%被诊断但未接受治疗,18.1%接受了治疗但未得到控制,19.4%接受了治疗且得到控制,这表明80.6%的糖尿病患者存在未满足的护理需求。糖尿病护理级联显示,由于缺乏筛查、筛查与诊断之间以及治疗与控制之间存在显著损失。这些结果表明南非对糖尿病护理存在重大未满足的需求。此外,该分析为评估南非应对糖尿病负担上升所做努力提供了一个基准。