Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Aug 2022)

Need for HTA supported risk factor screening for hypertension and diabetes in Nepal: A systematic scoping review

  • Chiranjivi Adhikari,
  • Chiranjivi Adhikari,
  • Rojana Dhakal,
  • Rojana Dhakal,
  • Lal Mani Adhikari,
  • Bijaya Parajuli,
  • Khem Raj Subedi,
  • Yeshoda Aryal,
  • Arjun Kumar Thapa,
  • Komal Shah

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.898225
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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ObjectiveHealth Technology Assessment (HTA) is a comprehensive and important tool for assessment and decision-making in public health and healthcare practice. It is recommended by the WHO and has been applied in practice in many countries, mostly the developed ones. HTA might be an important tool to achieve universal health coverage (UHC), especially beneficial to low-and-middle-income countries (LMIC). Even though the Package for Essential Non-communicable Diseases (PEN) has already been initiated, there is a clear policy gap in the HTA of any health device, service, or procedure, including the assessment of cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs) in Nepal. Hence, we carried out the review to document the HTA supported evidence of hypertension and diabetes screening, as CVRFs in Nepal.Materials and methodsWe searched in PubMed, Cochrane, and Google Scholar, along with some gray literature published in the last 6 years (2016–2021) in a systematic way with a controlled vocabulary using a well-designed and pilot tested search strategy, screened them, and a total of 53 articles and reports that matched the screening criteria were included for the review. We then, extracted the data in a pre-designed MS-Excel format, first in one, and then, from it, in two, with more specific data.ResultsOf 53 included studies, we reported the prevalence and/or proportion of hypertension and diabetes with various denominators. Furthermore, HTA-related findings such as cost, validity, alternative tool or technology, awareness, and intervention effectiveness have been documented and discussed further, however, not summarized due to their sparingness.ConclusionOverall, the prevalence of DM (4.4–18.8%) and HTN (17.2–70.0%) was reported in most studies, with a few, covering other aspects of HTA of DM/HTN. A national policy for establishing an HTA agency and some immediately implementable actions are highly recommended.

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