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SICKLE CELL DISEASE IN UGANDA: A TIME FOR ACTION

G.R. SERJEANT, C. M. NDUGWA

Abstract


ABSTRACT
Objectives: To draw attention to the extent of homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease as a public
health problem in Uganda where a mean 20% frequency of the sickle cell trait implies that
25,000 babies with SS disease are born each year. To highlight the dangers of applying
interventions developed in non-malarial areas to regions where malaria may change the
natural history and outcome of sickle cell disease.
Data Sources: The published literature from Africa and from the US and Caribbean in
populations of African ancestry.
Study Selection: The world literature especially, that derived from the US, Caribbean, and
equatorial Africa.
Data Extraction and synthesis: In non-malarial areas, simple interventions applied early in
life have significantly improved survival and the quality of life. Two well documented
interventions are pneumococcal prophylaxis and the early parental diagnosis of acute splenic
sequestration. The available literature from Africa suggests that neither of these may be
appropriate in malarial areas.
Conclusions: Manifestations of SS disease differ in malarial areas and it is questionable
whether interventions developed in non-malarial areas apply. There is an urgent need to
document the causes of death so that locally appropriate interventions may be developed to
improve survival. Equally urgent is the need to define the pattern of clinical problems so that
models of care may be evolved for use in malarial areas. Without this knowledge, health care
planners will not have the information necessary to develop strategies and limited resources
may be inappropriately deployed.

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The East African Medical Journal is published monthly by Kenya Medical Association.

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