Indications for Gynaecological Consultation by Women at a Rural Outreach Centre in North-Central Nigeria

Karshima, Jonathan Abina and Pam, Victor Chuwang and Atim, Terkaa and Abata, Philip Pine and Reich, Michael Ira (2019) Indications for Gynaecological Consultation by Women at a Rural Outreach Centre in North-Central Nigeria. In: Current Trends in Disease and Health Vol. 2. B P International, pp. 131-145. ISBN 978-93-89562-19-4

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Abstract

Aims: To identify the reasons for consultations, the common clinical diagnosis and disease pattern at
a rural gynaecologic outreach clinic.
Study Design: Descriptive Retrospective Study.
Place and Duration of Study: NKST Hospital Mkar-Gboko, Benue state, North-central Nigeria, in
seven years (1st April 2005 to 31st July 2012).
Methodology: Information from the case notes of patients who attended the outreach clinic over the
study period were retrieved and analysed. Majority of the patients came by self-referral.
Results: Of the 1,733 women that attended the clinic during the study period, 1,605 (92.6%) women
made the inclusion criteria and formed the study population. The age range was 15 to 78 years; mean
value of 33.6 +/- 9.5 year; 78% of the women were ages 21 – 40 years. The mean parity was 2.1 +/-
2.7and ranged between 0 to 13 children. 68% of the women were para 0 – 2 whilst 18% had parity of
5 and above. The women had 73 reasons and 2,390 presenting complaints, 49.6% of them had
multiple presenting complaints (average 1.5 complaints per woman). Most common complaints were
inability to conceive, lower abdominal pain and leaking of urine and /or faeces amongst 38%, 11%
and 10% of the women respectively. There were 63 disease conditions with 1,793 clinical diagnoses.
About 12% of the women had multiple clinical diagnoses. The three leading clinical diagnoses were
infertility, genital fistulae and uterine myoma, in 46%, 12% and 10% of the women respectively;
followed by sundry other gynaecological disorders (9%) and medical disease conditions (5%) in which
hypertension, diabetes mellitus and retroviral diseases were more frequent in that order. Some
women (n = 21; 1%) came for second opinion.
Conclusion: Gynaecological diseases are diverse and common among women in rural central
Nigeria. Inability to conceive, lower abdominal pain and incontinence of urine and or faeces were the
three main reasons women sought consultation with the gynaecologist at Mkar. Infertility, genital
fistulae, uterine myoma, non-communicable medical disorders and retroviral diseases were leading
clinical diagnoses. Extending the services of Gynaecologist to the rural areas in the region may
reduce the access gap to women’s health and enhance national development.

Item Type: Book Section
Subjects: STM Academic > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@stmacademic.com
Date Deposited: 16 Nov 2023 05:28
Last Modified: 16 Nov 2023 05:28
URI: http://article.researchpromo.com/id/eprint/1813

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