Intermittent catheterisation for individuals with disability related to spinal cord injury in Tanzania

Citation: 
Erikael S. Nade, Marie V. E. Andriessen, Fabiola Rimoy, Mihayo Maendeleo, Vivian Saria, Haleluya I. Moshi & Marieke C. J. Dekker
Publication year: 
2020

Study design

Cross-sectional pilot study on spinal cord injury (SCI) among in- and outpatients.

Objectives

To evaluate the challenges faced by individuals with SCI during Clean Intermittent Catheterisation (CIC).

Setting

Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center (KCMC), a tertiary referral hospital in Moshi, Tanzania.

Methods

A questionnaire was sent to individuals with SCI who were either admitted to the Orthopedic Rehabilitation Unit or attended the Outpatient clinic between January and April 2018. Inpatients were less than 1 year post-injury and outpatients were one to 3 years post-injury.

Results

In total, 48 individuals responded: 28 outpatients and 20 inpatients. Among the inpatient group, 80% were performing CIC as compared with 25% of outpatient group. Of the entire cohort, 35.4% reported doing well without catheter-based management. Failure to perform CIC was present in 16.7% of all individuals. CIC-equipment was unavailable in local villages for 58.3% of all patients. The most frequent complications of CIC were urinary tract infections (20.8%) and mild bleeding (14.6%). The majority of individuals (79.2%) reported satisfaction with their situation, regardless of the severity.

Conclusions

Some individuals performed CIC upon discharge, but the majority discontinued use, for which unavailability of CIC-equipment was a major determinant. While all individuals reported concerns prior to CIC, only a small minority actually experienced anxiety, pain or shame. Through targeted counselling and enhanced regular follow-up we will likely improve compliance to CIC.