Summary points There is a large body of literature recommending decentralisation of noncommunicable disease (NCD) care, but extremely few “real-world” examples at scale. Those that do are largely examples of NCD care limited to single diseases and in similar geographical or cultural settings. This project provides screening, enrolment and clinical outcomes data for fully integrated, multi-level NCD clinics across a wide geographical area in Africa’s second most populous nation. It is one of the first examples of scaled-up comprehensive care for all-comers with chronic noninfectious disease in rural and urban Ethiopia. The extra costs and effort involved in staff training, mentoring and community engagement are not inconsiderable for a modest gain in the detection and treatment of common NCDs. Its major limitation is that it is a “real-world” intervention and observational cohort, studied over a period constrained by a global pandemic and internal civil conflict. It uses routinely collected clinical data, limiting the ability to fully evaluate all relevant clinical outcomes. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12913-024-11328-x.
【저자키워드】 Ethiopia, Non-communicable disease, implementation research, Comprehensive care, decentralisation,