Sunday, August 20, 2023

Kidney disease in war-torn Sudan

 The Lancet brings us this news from Sudan.

Kidney failure in Sudan: thousands of lives at risk by Hatim A Hassan, Mohamed Hany Hafez, Valerie A Luyckx, Serhan Tuğlular, and Ali K Abu-Alfa, The Lancet, August 09, 2023DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(23)01370-3

"Sudan is one of few countries in Africa that has provided dialysis and transplantation under universal health coverage for several decades.2 Before the war, around 8000 patients required ongoing dialysis and around 4500 were living with kidney transplants (appendix). Haemodialysis was provided twice per week instead of three times per week to permit access to more patients within budget constraints.3

Haemodialysis requires continuous water, electricity, staffing, and disposable supplies. Since fighting began, dialysis services, which are mostly located in Khartoum, have been severely disrupted (appendix). Patients who can, have fled to dialysis units in other cities. Despite some units reducing haemodialysis frequency to once weekly, shortening sessions at times to 2 h, and offering appointments all day and all night, they are struggling to cope with demand. Most haemodialysis staff continue to work without being paid and are at high risk of burn-out. Egypt is accepting patients needing dialysis, but the cost and risk of the journey are prohibitively high for most.

Dialysis supplies have mostly run out by early August, 2023, despite dialysis sessions being reduced to weekly. A donation of supplies for a third of the patients for 3 weeks was obtained from one company. Reliance on donations of the large quantities of dialysis supplies needed for around 8000 patients is unrealistic. Dialysis supplies are not only expensive, but are bulky and costly to transport. Patients with kidney transplants are experiencing dangerous interruptions in their access to immunosuppressive medication. A reliable source of financing is urgently required to meet the needs of patients requiring dialysis and people with kidney transplants.

Support is needed to prevent adding a further layer of tragedy to this war if dialysis services cannot continue and transplant medication is not provided. Wars elsewhere pose similar threats to dialysis provision. The global health agenda must address the urgent need for transparent decision making and affordable access to vital treatments such as dialysis and transplantation during crises. Finding solutions to meet the needs of patients with kidney failure who depend on these therapies in low-resource settings in times of peace is also long overdue."

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