Prevention, care and diabetic foot care, Mali

Objectives

In Mali, 1 year of insulin purchase levies 38% on family incomes, thus cost of diabetes and its complications is a major poverty factor and excludes underprivileged populations from health care.

Santé Diabète Mali has changed diabetes care in the country since 2004, but with a prevalence of diabetes exceeding 3% and a population not receiving proper health care, it is necessary to scale up diabetes prevention and care.

The project aims at reducing morbidity, development of complications and mortality due to diabetes.

Approach

The project is a continuation of the work carried out by Santé Diabète Mali on the WDF funded projects "Nutrition and diabetes" (WDF04-074) and "Training of health personnel" (WDF05-114).

In addition, the Step-by-Step foot care model developed under WDF03-056 will be used to improve capacity for preventing and treating the diabetic foot. The project will be implemented in the Bamako and Douentza districts and in Timbuktu, Sikasso, Mopti, Gao and Kayes regions.

The project is co-funded by the European Commission and the Swiss Development Co-operation. Handicap International collaborates with Santé Diabète Mali on the foot care component.

The target groups are: General population, people with diabetes and their families as well as health care professionals. The aim is to promote an overall approach to diabetes, which places people living with or at-risk of diabetes in the centre.

The project has 3 main components:
• Consolidation of the diabetes care delivery system
• Information, education and communication (IEC) for the population to reinforce diabetes prevention
• Establishment of prevention and management capacities of the diabetic foot

The first component aims at continuing the model of decentralisation of diabetes care delivery established in Mali with training of health care professionals. Equipment for analysis and educational materials will be provided and patient associations will be strengthened.

The activities carried out under this component include continuing decentralisation of care at secondary and primary care level, initiating decentralisation at tertiary level and supporting the establishment of an Endocrinology & Diabetes Unit.

In addition, it comprises several training courses aimed at health care professionals working in the participating regions and at different levels within the health care system. In total, 516 health care professionals will be trained on diabetes prevention and care.

Moreover, 1000 students from health care schools will receive specific training on diabetes prevention and care to ensure they have some knowledge of diabetes when they graduate.

The second component focuses on sensitising, informing and promoting changes in the behaviour of general public in order to prevent diabetes. Activities under this component include IEC sessions performed by peer educators, adaptation and re-designing of the education and information toolkit developed under WDF04-074, dissemination of messages concerning diabetes through the media, organisation of screening days in the target areas and, eventually transfer of the responsibility of the IEC sessions to the patient associations.

The third component aims at improving prevention and management of the diabetic foot in the 4 areas of Bamako and Douentza districts as well as Sikasso and Timbuktu regions using the Step-by-Step model. The Step-by-Step model seeks to provide a strategy for preventing and managing the diabetic foot by improving health care professional capacity for managing the diabetic foot and increasing patient knowledge of self-care for their feet. The activities conducted under the third component involve adaptation of the Step-by-Step tools and translating them into French, establishment of a diabetic foot unit within the Endocrinology & Diabetes Unit, basic and advanced training courses for 7 teams of health care professionals to provide prevention, care and education on the diabetic foot as well as training of surgeons, physiotherapists and foot therapists regarding surgery on a patient with diabetes and the particularity of a diabetic amputation, which will be fitted with a prosthesis.

Results at completion

- 534 doctors, nurses and paramedics trained.
- 30 physiotherapy trained
- Organisation of screening days with information and education on diabetes in the different targeted areas

Project information

  • Project Nr.:
    WDF07-0251
  • Project status:
    Completed
  • Intervention areas:
    Prevention
    Access to care
  • Region:
    Africa
  • Country:
    Mali
  • Partners:
    Santé Diabéte Mali Association/NGO Santé Diabète
  • Project period:
    2007 2010
  • Project budget:
    EUR 91,619.00
  • WDF contribution:
    EUR 91,619.00