[Nephrology in Sub-saharan Africa: Past, present, future]

Nephrol Ther. 2021 Apr:17S:S37-S44. doi: 10.1016/j.nephro.2020.02.015.
[Article in French]

Abstract

Nephrology was a relatively poorly known specialty in sub-Saharan Africa until the early 1980s, because of low awareness and lack of access to diagnosis and renal replacement therapies. Nephrology has seen progress on the continent despite an unfavourable economic and geopolitical environment. With a prevalence of fewer than five nephrologists per million inhabitants, the training of nephrologists, now carried out on the continent, allowed to have more than 200 specialists trained in the last decade in French-speaking sub-Saharan Africa. Clinical and basic research is developing with quality work published from the continent in major international journals. The population receiving haemodialysis remains small, between 0 and 200 per million inhabitants. Kidney transplantation, with a prevalence between 0 and 5 per million inhabitants, is only well structured in South Africa. In this context of scarce resources, a strategy based on the prevention of non-communicable diseases in general, and chronic kidney disease in particular, should be prioritised.

Keywords: Afrique subsaharienne; Dialyse; Dialysis; Formation; Kidney transplantation; Nephrology; Néphrologie; Sub-Saharan Africa; Training; Transplantation rénale.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Africa South of the Sahara / epidemiology
  • Humans
  • Nephrologists
  • Nephrology*
  • Renal Dialysis
  • Renal Insufficiency, Chronic*