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Adv Ther ; 2024 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39276184

ABSTRACT

Hypertension and diabetes are currently the most common, treatable, and controllable cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors for stroke, heart, and renal diseases in Cameroon. Hypertension affects 30% of adults aged ≥ 20 years with 90% as uncontrolled cases, while type 2 diabetes affects 6% of the same population, with 70% remaining underdiagnosed. Despite publication of the first Roadmap on raised blood pressure by the World Heart Federation in 2015, the Pan African Society of Cardiology Roadmap in 2017, and the technical package for cardiovascular disease management in primary health care (WHO-HEARTS) in 2020, very little progress has been made in improving the diagnosis, treatment, and control of cardiovascular risk factors and diseases in Cameroon. The Cameroon Cardiac Society and a dozen Cameroon non-communicable diseases societies, national organizations from the community and the civil society, along with researchers and members of academia and the health sector, came together under the patronage of representatives of the government to propose new strategies to improve hypertension and diabetes control and save lives in Cameroon. Two simple and practical algorithms for the management of hypertension and diabetes were developed. The ten recommendations tailored to be efficiently implemented in our country were summarized under the acronym 'A SMART VIEW' (Awareness, Screening, Manufacture, Activity, Research, Task-shifting, HIV/AIDS, Insurance, Education, and WHO-HEARTS). It is our hope that all stakeholders will further collaborate to remove barriers and enhance facilitators to deploy the proposed actions and reduce the burden of uncontrolled hypertension and untreated diabetes in Cameroon.


Hypertension and diabetes are very common, yet treatable, cardiovascular, and metabolic risk factors for stroke, heart, and renal diseases in Cameroon. One-third of all adults aged 20 years or more in Cameroon have hypertension, in most of whom it remains uncontrolled. In addition, while 6% of these adults have type 2 diabetes, more than two-thirds remain underdiagnosed. Despite efforts to improve the diagnosis, treatment, and control of cardiovascular risk factors and diseases in Cameroon, minimal progress has been made. The Cameroon Cardiac Society, supported by input from Cameroon non-communicable diseases societies, national institutions/organizations, and representatives from the community, research, academia, and the health sector, has now developed two practical algorithms and ten recommendations specific to the Cameroonian population in an attempt to improve the control of hypertension and diabetes in Cameroon. It is hoped that these stakeholders will further collaborate to ensure the efficient implementation of these recommendations across the country, with the ongoing aim of monitoring their effectiveness over the next five years.

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