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Ghana's burden of chronic non-communicable diseases: future directions in research, practice and policy

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineEditorialpeer-review

Published

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Ghana's burden of chronic non-communicable diseases: future directions in research, practice and policy. / de-Graft Aikins, A; Addo, J; Ofei, F et al.
In: Ghana medical journal, Vol. 46, No. 2 Suppl, 06.2012, p. 1-3.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineEditorialpeer-review

Harvard

de-Graft Aikins, A, Addo, J, Ofei, F, Bosu, WK & Agyemang, C 2012, 'Ghana's burden of chronic non-communicable diseases: future directions in research, practice and policy', Ghana medical journal, vol. 46, no. 2 Suppl, pp. 1-3. <http://www.ghanamedj.org/suparticles/June2012/Commentary.pdf>

APA

Vancouver

de-Graft Aikins A, Addo J, Ofei F, Bosu WK, Agyemang C. Ghana's burden of chronic non-communicable diseases: future directions in research, practice and policy. Ghana medical journal. 2012 Jun;46(2 Suppl):1-3.

Author

de-Graft Aikins, A ; Addo, J ; Ofei, F et al. / Ghana's burden of chronic non-communicable diseases : future directions in research, practice and policy. In: Ghana medical journal. 2012 ; Vol. 46, No. 2 Suppl. pp. 1-3.

Bibtex

@article{74ae52fe9b7f4c34bc39f4c142756bd2,
title = "Ghana's burden of chronic non-communicable diseases: future directions in research, practice and policy",
abstract = "The prevalence of major chronic non-communicable diseases and their risk factors has increased over time and contributes significantly to the Ghana's disease burden. Conditions like hypertension, stroke and diabetes affect young and old, urban and rural, and wealthy and poor communities. The high cost of care drives the poor further into poverty. Lay awareness and knowledge are limited, health systems (biomedical, ethnomedical and complementary) are weak, and there are no chronic disease policies. These factors contribute to increasing risk, morbidity and mortality. As a result chronic diseases constitute a public health and a developmental problem that should be of urgent concern not only for the Ministry of Health, but also for the Government of Ghana. New directions in research, practice and policy are urgently needed. They should be supported by active partnerships between researchers, policymakers, industry, patient groups, civil society, government and development partners.",
keywords = "Ghana, Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases, Health Systems, Policy, Research, Cost of Illness, Chronic Disease -- Epidemiology",
author = "{de-Graft Aikins}, A and J Addo and F Ofei and Bosu, {William K.} and C Agyemang",
year = "2012",
month = jun,
language = "English",
volume = "46",
pages = "1--3",
journal = "Ghana medical journal",
issn = "0016-9560",
publisher = "Ghana Medical Association",
number = "2 Suppl",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ghana's burden of chronic non-communicable diseases

T2 - future directions in research, practice and policy

AU - de-Graft Aikins, A

AU - Addo, J

AU - Ofei, F

AU - Bosu, William K.

AU - Agyemang, C

PY - 2012/6

Y1 - 2012/6

N2 - The prevalence of major chronic non-communicable diseases and their risk factors has increased over time and contributes significantly to the Ghana's disease burden. Conditions like hypertension, stroke and diabetes affect young and old, urban and rural, and wealthy and poor communities. The high cost of care drives the poor further into poverty. Lay awareness and knowledge are limited, health systems (biomedical, ethnomedical and complementary) are weak, and there are no chronic disease policies. These factors contribute to increasing risk, morbidity and mortality. As a result chronic diseases constitute a public health and a developmental problem that should be of urgent concern not only for the Ministry of Health, but also for the Government of Ghana. New directions in research, practice and policy are urgently needed. They should be supported by active partnerships between researchers, policymakers, industry, patient groups, civil society, government and development partners.

AB - The prevalence of major chronic non-communicable diseases and their risk factors has increased over time and contributes significantly to the Ghana's disease burden. Conditions like hypertension, stroke and diabetes affect young and old, urban and rural, and wealthy and poor communities. The high cost of care drives the poor further into poverty. Lay awareness and knowledge are limited, health systems (biomedical, ethnomedical and complementary) are weak, and there are no chronic disease policies. These factors contribute to increasing risk, morbidity and mortality. As a result chronic diseases constitute a public health and a developmental problem that should be of urgent concern not only for the Ministry of Health, but also for the Government of Ghana. New directions in research, practice and policy are urgently needed. They should be supported by active partnerships between researchers, policymakers, industry, patient groups, civil society, government and development partners.

KW - Ghana

KW - Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases

KW - Health Systems

KW - Policy

KW - Research

KW - Cost of Illness

KW - Chronic Disease -- Epidemiology

M3 - Editorial

VL - 46

SP - 1

EP - 3

JO - Ghana medical journal

JF - Ghana medical journal

SN - 0016-9560

IS - 2 Suppl

ER -