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One in eight patients in hospitals in Africa is critically ill, and one in five of the critically ill die within a week, according to a new study in The Lancet. The researchers behind the largest study of critical illness in Africa to date conclude that many of these lives could have been saved with access to cheap life-saving treatments.
The study is the first large-scale mapping of critically ill patients in Africa. Nearly 20 000 patients in 180 hospitals in 22 African countries were surveyed in the study.
Being critically ill means having severely affected vital functions, such as extremely low blood pressure or low levels of oxygen in the blood. In the new study, researchers show that one in eight patients in African hospitals, 12.5%, is in this condition. Of these, one in five, 21%, die within a week, compared to 2.7% of those who are not critically ill.
A large proportion of critically ill patients, 69%, are treated in general wards rather than intensive care units. More than half of critically ill patients, 56%, do not receive even the basic critical care they need, such as oxygen therapy, intravenous fluids or simple airway management.
“Our study shows that there is a large and often neglected group of patients with critical illness in Africa,” says first author Tim Baker, Associate Professor at the Department of Global Public Health at Karolinska Institutet.
The researchers behind the study emphasise that these are basic but crucial health interventions that can make a big difference.
“If all patients had access to essential emergency and critical care, we could significantly reduce mortality. Moreover, these interventions are inexpensive and can be provided in general wards,” says Carl Otto Schell, researcher at the Department of Global Public Health at Karolinska Institutet and one of the initiators of the study.
Source: EurekAlert!