Diabetes Mellitus in The Gambia, West Africa

Abstract
A register of diabetic patients attending the Royal Victoria Hospital, Banjul, The Gambia, was kept and data on hospital admissions recorded over a 1-year period. Two hundred and sixty-nine patients (110 men, 159 women) were registered of whom 66 (25%) were receiving insulin. Seventy-five patients (28%: 40 men, 35 women) were newly diagnosed. There were significant differences in age (p less than 0.001) and obesity (p less than 0.001) between men and women and between patients with different types of diabetes. There were 95 hospital admissions (5.2%) related to diabetes, as were a fifth of medical out-patient attendances. Ketoacidosis was the major cause of death while foot infections were more common (p less than 0.01) in women. Diabetes imposed a heavy burden on the health services of The Gambia, a small developing country in West Africa; more than 3.6% of the annual health budget was spent on the treatment of diabetic patients.