In Uganda, Utilizing HIV/AIDS Infrastructure as a Gateway to Chronic Care of Hypertension in Africa

Hypertension is a largely unrecognized epidemic in Africa. The number of hypertensive patients in 2008 and 2025 is estimated at 74.7 and 125.5 million, respectively - a 68% increase. Because the majority of Africa is affected by poor health infrastructure and low numbers of health workers, attempts to prevent and treat hypertension are nearly non-existent. Given the urgency in scaling up resources to inform how hypertension prevention and treatment should be implemented, it is important to recognize where rapid scale-up of health infrastructure has previously occurred and work with effective infrastructure to reach the target populations. The response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Africa is the most high-profile and effective infrastructure scale-up that has occurred for any chronic disease. By utilizing the lessons learned in HIV/ AIDS, we can effectively reach out to large populations for hypertension screening, prevention, treatment, and retention This project involves investigators from Canada, South Africa, Uganda and Rwanda, all national leaders in hypertension, HIV/AIDS, generic drug formulations, supply chain management, and randomized evaluations. The team will test the effectiveness of mass screening campaigns, determine health system requirements, develop capacity building systems, evaluate the epidemiology, create awareness and work on a model to effectively treat and retain hypertension.

Grant ID
POC-0170-04
Show on Hub
On
Show on Spoke
Off
Follow-on Funding
Off
Lead Funding Organization
Challenge
Principal Investigator
Award Manager
Individual Funder Information
Funding Organization
Funding Amount (in original currency)
220104.00
Funding Currency
CAD
Exchange Rate (at time of payment)
0.7500000000
Funding Amount (in USD)
165078.00
Project Type
Project Primary Sector
Funding Date Range
-
Funding Total (In US dollars)
165078.00
Co-Funded
False