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New Research Shows Rural South Africa Faces Stroke Crisis Similar to Affluent Western Countries

Originally Published 08 March 2004
Professor Margaret Thorogood
Professor
Margaret
Thorogood

Debilitating strokes are an increasing threat and burden to rural South Africa and the health care services of poor developing countries require urgent adaptation to control the coming epidemic of vascular disease, reveals a new report “Prevalence of Stroke Survivors in Rural South Africa”, by Professor Margaret Thorogood from the University of Warwick.

Until now, little has been known about the burden of stroke in sub-Saharan Africa. The Southern African Stroke Prevention Initiative (SASPI) is a multi-disciplinary study set up to assess the burden and prevalence of stroke in a deprived rural area.

The research revealed that the actual numbers of stroke survivors left disabled was as high in rural South Africa as New Zealand, a typical developed country. Frequently viewed as a chronic illness of affluent countries, stroke is exposed as a significant cause of illness and disability in the developing world, and this impact is set to worsen.

The individuals surveyed were defined as disabled if he or she needed assistance washing, dressing, bathing, feeding, mobility or going to the toilet.

Within the area of the Southern African Stroke Prevention Initiative (SASPI), which has a population of 68 525, there is a stroke prevalence of 300 per 100 000 people. Of these stroke survivors 200 per 100 000 people (66%) were disabled.

Although more people suffer strokes in high-income countries, far less people are disabled by the condition. In New Zealand the proportion of stroke survivors who need help with a daily living activity is much lower (22%).

The numbers of stroke sufferers in rural South Africa and other African countries are set to grow as the age of the population increases, and undergoes a transition from predominantly infectious diseases to noncommunicable diseases, and most will have no access to life-improving or lifesaving treatment.

Professor Margaret Thorogood, from the University of Warwick, said: “The major burden of a stroke is not death, but chronic disability, and the percentage of sufferers disabled following a stroke is much higher in rural South Africa than in the developed world. Poverty-stricken Africa already suffers from a huge burden of HIV/ AIDS, and it now faces a looming epidemic of vascular disease.”

Stroke is a leading world-wide killer that now threatens Southern African countries, reveals the report. African governments must recognise stroke treatment as an urgent priority as epidemics of stroke and other chronic diseases are set to create a health crisis.

The prevalence of disabled stroke survivors has important implications for health care systems that need adapted to facilitate early treatment and rehabilitation. New care strategies are needed, as effective secondary prevention may reduce the incidence of recurrent strokes. Prevention and control of vascular disease needs acknowledged within health services that utilise early brain imaging, community-based research and detailed study of stroke.

Contacts: Professor Margaret Thorogood, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Tel: 024 7657 4509, Mobile: 0780 110 6647 or Jenny Murray, Communications Office, University of Warwick, Tel: 02476 574 255, Mobile: 07876 21 7740

“Prevalence of Stroke Survivors in Rural South Africa: Results From the Southern Stroke Prevention Initative (SASPI) Agincourt Field Site” is published in Stroke March 2004 See: http://stroke.ahajournals.org