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Cesarean section in Senegal: availability and quality of service


Cahiers d'études et de recherches francophones / Santé . Volume 8, Number 5, 342-6, Octobre-Novembre 1998, Point de vue

Résumé  

Author(s) : El HASSANE SIDIBE

Summary : Diabetes mellitus is becoming more common in African cities, where it may affect up to 7% of the hospital population. It particularly affects poor male patients and 73 to 80% of those affected have non insulin-dependent diabetes. The frequency of non-obese, poorly cetogenic patients is high in Sub-Saharan Africa. This may be due to malnutrition, with a deficit either in protein or in calories. Such malnutrition is a major public health problem affecting children in Sudanese and Sahelian areas and may interact with environmental and genetic factors. In equatorial environments, the toxic effects of alcohol abuse on the pancreas are simply another environmental factor, reducing the endocrine function of the pancreas. These observations are important because: 1) diabetes mellitus has a severe social impact in this area and 2) nutrition has a general effect on the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus.

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