Jones, Stephanie ORCID: 0000-0001-9149-8606, Spencer, Joseph ORCID: 0000-0003-3723-7629, Adeniji, Olaleye, Abd-Allah, Foad, Ogunde, Gabriel, Ebenezer, Ad Adams, Kalaria, Raj, Lightbody, Catherine Elizabeth ORCID: 0000-0001-5016-3471, Langhorne, Peter et al (2024) Towards Improving Stroke Services in Africa: Results from the Africa-UK Stroke Partnership [AUKSP] Surveys. Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases, 33 (10). ISSN 1052-3057
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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.202...
Abstract
Background
The African Stroke Organization (ASO) in partnership with the University of Central Lancashire's Stroke Research Team launched the Africa-UK Stroke Partnership (AUKSP). AUKSP undertook two (stroke expert and hospital Stroke Unit (SU)) on-line surveys mapping existing capacity and capability to deliver African stroke care.
Methods
An on-line expert survey tool was sent to 139 stroke experts in 54 African countries October 2021- March 2022 and the hospital SU survey to 120 hospital SUs (identified from the expert survey) June-October 2022. Both survey tools were prepared according to the World Stroke Organisation's Roadmap for Delivering Quality Stroke Care. Completed responses were exported from Qualtrics into Microsoft excel and were analysed descriptively.
Results
Forty-five expert responses and 62 hospital SU responses were analysed, representing 54(87%) public hospitals, 7(11%) private and 1(2%) charitable organization. In both surveys, three main priorities for improvement of stroke services were: a rapid and prompt stroke diagnosis; effective primary and secondary stroke prevention, and acute stroke management. Survey findings suggest that there is a low presence of national stroke surveillance systems and registries, and heterogeneity in availability of diagnostic services, SUs, endovascular treatments, and rehabilitation.
Conclusion
Significant gaps exist in Africa's capacity and capability to deliver essential elements of effective and quality stroke care. Tackling these challenges requires urgent and sustained multi-stakeholder action including: government, administrators, policy makers and other partners. Our survey findings highlight key priority areas for multi-stakeholder engagement and crafting of a pragmatic, prioritized and context-sensitive African Stroke Action Plan.
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