Title
Gaps in guidelines for the management of diabetes in low- and middle-income versus high-income countriesda systematic review
Date Issued
01 May 2018
Access level
open access
Resource Type
review
Author(s)
Owolabi M.O.
Yaria J.O.
Daivadanam M.
Makanjuola A.I.
Parker G.
Oldenburg B.
Vedanthan R.
Norris S.
Oguntoye A.R.
Osundina M.A.
Herasme O.
Lakoh S.
Ogunjimi L.O.
Abraham S.E.
Olowoyo P.
Jenkins C.
Feng W.
Bayona H.
Mohan S.
Joshi R.
Webster R.
Kengne A.P.
Trofor A.
Lotrean L.M.
Praveen D.
Bobrow K.
Riddell M.A.
Makrilakis K.
Manios Y.
Ovbiagele B.
Publisher(s)
American Diabetes Association Inc.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The extentto which diabetes (DM) practice guidelines, often basedon evidence from high-income countries (HIC), can be implemented to improve outcomes in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) is a critical challenge. We carried out a systematic review to compare type 2 DM guidelines in individual LMIC versus HIC over the past decade to identify aspects that could be improved to facilitate implementation. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Eligible guidelines were sought from online databases and websites of diabetes associations and ministries of health. Type 2 DM guidelines published between 2006 and 2016 with accessible full publications were included. Each of the 54 eligible guidelines was assessed for compliance with the Institute of Medicine (IOM) standards, coverage of the cardiovascular quadrangle (epidemiologic surveillance, prevention, acute care, and rehabilitation), translatability, and its target audiences. RESULTS: Most LMIC guidelines were inadequate in terms of applicability, clarity, and dissemination planaswellassocioeconomic and ethical-legal contextualization.LMIC guidelines targeted mainly health care providers, with only a few including patients (7%), payers (11%), and policy makers (18%) as their target audiences. Compared with HIC guidelines, the spectrum of DM clinical care addressed by LMIC guidelines was narrow. Most guidelines from the LMIC complied with less than half of the IOM standards, with 12% of the LMIC guidelines satisfying at least four IOM criteria as opposed to 60% of the HIC guidelines (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: A new approachto the contextualization, content development, and deliveryofLMIC guidelines is needed to improve outcomes.
Start page
1097
End page
1105
Volume
41
Issue
5
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Geografía económica y cultural
Endocrinología, Metabolismo (incluyendo diabetes, hormonas)
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85046126415
PubMed ID
Source
Diabetes Care
ISSN of the container
01495992
Sponsor(s)
SciencesthroughgrantnumberUL1-TR-001450.W.F. acknowledges grant support from the American Heart Association (14SDG1829003) and National Institutes of Health (P20-GM-109040). R.J. is supported by a Future Leader Fellowship from the Australian Heart Foundation (100484). R.W. is supported by an Early Career Fellowship from the National Health and Medical Research Council (1125044).
Funding. No formal grant funding was obtained for this review from governmental organizations, nongovernmentalorganizations,or commercial sources. However, most of the authors are supported by grants funded under the GACD consortium. M.O.O. and B.Ov. are supported by U54-HG-007479 and U01-NS-079179 from the National Institutes of Health and the GACD. M.D. acknowledges funding support from EU Horizon 2020 [SMART2D-H2020-643692]. R.V. is supported by 1R01-HL-125487 from the National Institutes of Health. C.J. is supported by National Institutes of Health National Center for Advancing Translational
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus