Experience With Prevention Programs In The Asian Pacific Region
Kidney International (2005) 67, S75–S78; doi:10.1111/j.1523-1755.2005.09419.x
Experience with a program for prevention of chronic renal failure in India
MUTHU KRISHNA MANI
Apollo Hospital, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
Correspondence: Muthu Krishna Mani, Chief Nephrologist, Apollo Hospital, 21, Greams Lane, Chennai 600 006, India. E-mail:manirama@eth.net
Abstract
Experience with a program for prevention of chronic renal failure in India.
Background
For the past eight years, the Kidney Help Trust of Chennai has run a program to prevent chronic renal failure by regular screening of an entire population of 25,000, and treatment of diabetes and hypertension with the cheapest available drugs1. The total cost amounts to 25 cents per capita of the study population.
Methods
The program has recently been expanded to cover the adjacent area with a population of 21,500. Both the original population and the new population are being surveyed. Persons at risk of renal failure are identified as reported earlier1, and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is estimated by the MDRD formula. The survey is as yet incomplete. Six thousand one hundred people in the new area, and 20,986 in the old, have been studied so far, and the numbers and percentage of those with GFR below normal have been compared.
Results
The prevalence of impaired renal function (GFR below 80 mL/min) in the original population is 8.6 per thousand, and in the new population is 13.9 per thousand (P = 0.005, RR 1.61, CI 1.15–2.24).
Conclusion
This model provides an effective method for prevention of chronic renal failure at the community level.
Keywords:
community, low cost, cost effective
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RESEARCH
Prevention of chronic renal failure at the community level
Kidney International Original Article


