Current status, utilization and cost of hemodialysis services in Ghana

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Current status, utilization and cost of hemodialysis services in Ghana
Elliot Koranteng
Tannor
Kojo Hutton-Mensah kojohutt@yahoo.com Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital Department of Medicine Kumasi
Priscilla Opare-Addo priscillaadjei23@gmail.com Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital Department of Medicine Kumasi
Martin Kofi Agyei martinagyei@yahoo.co.uk School of Medicine and Dentistry, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology Department of Medicine Kumasi
Kojo Faka Gyan kfgonemission@gmail.com Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital Directorate of Medicine Kumasi
Abdul-Jalil Inusah docjalil@yahoo.com Korle Bu Teaching Hospital Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Accra
Beatrice Irene Nyann rajibinan@yahoo.com University of Ghana Medical Centre Department of Paediatric Accra
Kwabena Amo-Antwi amoantwikwabena@yahoo.com Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Kumasi
Valerie Luyckx valerie.luyckx@uzh.ch Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School Renal Division Boston MA
Ikechi Okpechi iokpechi@ualberta.ca Groote Schuur Hospital and University of Cape Town Division of Nephrology and Hypertension Cape Town
 
 
 
 
 
 

Kidney failure is common in Ghana. Haemodialysis (HD) is the most common treatment modality for survival. Although, HD has been available in Ghana for 50 years, the majority of patients who develop kidney failure cannot access it. We describe the state of HD, dialysis prevalence, its utilization and cost of HD after fifty years of dialysis initiation in Ghana.

A situational assessment of HDs centers in Ghana was conducted by surveying nephrologists, doctors, nurses and other health care professionals in HD centers from August to October 2022. We assessed the density of HD centers, number of HD machines, prevalence of nephrologists, number of patients receiving HD treatment and the cost of dialysis in private and government facilities in Ghana

There are 51 HD centres located in 9 of the 16 regions of Ghana. Of these, only 40 centres are functioning, as 11 had shut down or are yet to operate.  Of the functioning centres most (n=26, 65%) are in the Greater Accra region serving 17.7% of the population and 7(17.5%) in the Ashanti region serving 17.5% of the population in Ghana. The rest of the seven regions have one centre each.  The private sector has twice as many HD centers (n=27, 67.5%) as the public sector (n=13,32.5%). There are 299 HD machines yielding 9.7 HD machines per million population (pmp) with a median of 6 (IQR 4-10) machines per centre. Ghana has 0.44 nephrologists pmp. Currently, 1195 patients receive HD, giving a prevalence of 38.8 patients pmp with 609(50.9%) in the private sector. The mean cost of HD session is US $53.9±8.8 in Ghana.

There are gross inequities in the regional distribution of HD centers in Ghana, with a low HD prevalence and nephrology workforce despite a high burden of CKD. The cost of haemodialysis remains prohibitive and mainly paid out-of-pocket limiting its utilization. (This has been submitted for consideration for publication at in BMC Health Service Research).


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