Chronic kidney disease in low- and middle-income countries
John W. Stanifer(Duke Institute for Health Innovation), Anthony N. Muiru(Massachusetts General Hospital), Tazeen H. Jafar(Duke-NUS Medical School), Uptal D. Patel(Clinical Research Institute)
Cited by 327Open Access
Abstract
Most of the global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is occurring in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). As a result of rapid urbanization in LMICs, a growing number of populations are exposed to numerous environmental toxins, high infectious disease burdens and increasing rates of noncommunicable diseases. For CKD, this portends a high prevalence related to numerous etiologies, and it presents unique challenges. A better understanding of the epidemiology of CKD in LMICs is urgently needed, but this must be coupled with strong public advocacy and broad, collaborative public health efforts that address environmental, communicable, and non-communicable risk factors.
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