A national diabetes care and education programme: the Ghana model

An account is given of how a national diabetes care and education programme was developed in Ghana, a developing country, through international collaboration of medical schools, industry and government health care institutions. The approach is by way of trained diabetes teams consisting of physician...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diabetes research and clinical practice 2000-08, Vol.49 (2), p.149-157
Hauptverfasser: Amoah, A.G.B, Owusu, S.K, Acheampong, J.W, Agyenim-Boateng, K, Asare, H.R, Owusu, A.A, Mensah-Poku, M.F, Adamu, F.C, Amegashie, R.A, Saunders, J.Terry, Fang, W.L, Pastors, J.G, Sanborn, C, Barrett, E.J, Woode, M.K.A
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container_end_page 157
container_issue 2
container_start_page 149
container_title Diabetes research and clinical practice
container_volume 49
creator Amoah, A.G.B
Owusu, S.K
Acheampong, J.W
Agyenim-Boateng, K
Asare, H.R
Owusu, A.A
Mensah-Poku, M.F
Adamu, F.C
Amegashie, R.A
Saunders, J.Terry
Fang, W.L
Pastors, J.G
Sanborn, C
Barrett, E.J
Woode, M.K.A
description An account is given of how a national diabetes care and education programme was developed in Ghana, a developing country, through international collaboration of medical schools, industry and government health care institutions. The approach is by way of trained diabetes teams consisting of physicians, dietitians and nurse educators at two tertiary institutional levels (teaching hospitals) who in turn trained teams consisting of physicians, dietitians or diettherapy nurses, nurse educators and pharmacists at regional and district/sub-regional levels to offer care and education to patients and the community. In three years all regional and about 63% of sub-regional/district health facilities had trained diabetes health care teams, run diabetes services and had diabetes registers at these institutions. Additionally a set of guidelines for diabetes care and education was produced. All programme objectives with the exception of one (deployment of diabetes kits) were met. Distances to be travelled by persons with diabetes to receive diabetes care had been reduced considerably. The success of the project has given an impetus to the collaborators to extend the programme to the primary health care level. The continuing prohibitive prices of diabetes medications and supplies however, could be addressed by removing taxes on such supplies. The Ghana diabetes care model, a ‘top-down’ approach, initially involving two diabetes centres is recommended to other developing countries, which intend to incorporate diabetes care and education into their health care system.
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subjects Biological and medical sciences
Care
Delivery of Health Care - organization & administration
Developing Countries
Development
Diabetes
Diabetes Mellitus - therapy
Education
Education, Continuing - organization & administration
Ghana
Guidelines
Health Personnel - education
Hospitals
Humans
Implementation
Medical sciences
Models, Educational
National
Patient Care Team
Prevention and actions
Programme
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Specific populations (family, woman, child, elderly...)
Tropical medicine
title A national diabetes care and education programme: the Ghana model
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