1. Development of the certificate course in the management of hypertension in Africa (CCMH-Africa): proceedings of the first continental faculty meeting, Nairobi, Kenya, 25–26 February 2018
- Author
-
Albertino Damasceno, Brian Rayner, Francesco P. Cappuccio, Abdoul Kane, Jean Baptiste Anzouan Kacou, Michael A. Weber, Dorairaj Prabhakaran, Bertrand Fikahem Ellenga Mbolla, BC Anisiuba, Hamadou Ba, Bongani M. Mayosi, Andre Pascal Kengne, Neil R Poulter, Christian Delles, George Nel, Arun Jose, Frederick Bukachi, Habib Gamra, Bhalla Sandeep, Bernard Gitura, Amha Weldehana, Mohamed Awad, Dike B. Ojji, Euloge Kramoh, Ana Olga Mocumbi, Elijah Ogola, Calypse Ngwasiri, Brice Kitio, Aletta E Shutte, Anastase Dzudie, Bruno Mipinda, Mahmoud U Sani, Samuel Kingue, Ali Ibrahim Toure, Harun Otieno, and Saad Subhani
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Public health ,General Medicine ,Monitoring and evaluation ,Certification ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Certificate ,language.human_language ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Irish ,Action plan ,General partnership ,medicine ,language ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Curriculum - Abstract
BACKGROUND In response to the call by the World Health Organisation to reduce premature deaths from non-communicable diseases by 25% by the year 2025 (25×25), the Pan-African Society of Cardiology (PASCAR), in partnership with several organisations, including the World Heart Federation, have developed an urgent 10-point action plan to improve detection, treatment and control of hypertension in Africa. Priority six of this action plan is to promote a task-shifting/task-sharing approach in the management of hypertension. AIM This capacity-building initiative aims to enhance the knowledge, skills and core competences of primary healthcare physicians in the management of hypertension and related complications. METHODS In a collaborative approach with the International Society of Hypertension, the British and Irish Hypertension Society, the Public Health Foundation of India and the Centre for Chronic Disease Control, the PASCAR hypertension taskforce held a continental faculty meeting in Kenya on 25 and 26 February 2018 to review and discuss a process of effective contextualisation and implementation of the Indian hypertension management course on the African continent. RESULTS A tailored African course in terms of evidence-based learning, up-to-date curriculum and on-the-job training was developed with a robust monitoring and evaluation strategy. The course will be offered on a modular basis with a judicious mix of case studies, group discussions and contact sessions, with great flexibility to accommodate participants' queries. CONCLUSIONS Hypertension affects millions of people in Africa and if left untreated is a major cause of heart disease, kidney disease and stroke. CCMH-Africa will train in the next 10 years, 25 000 certified general physicians and 50 000 nurses, capable of adequately managing uncomplicated hypertension, thereby freeing the few available specialists to focus on severe or complicated cases.
- Published
- 2018