Kushner Adam L, Cherian Meena N, Noel Luc, Spiegel David A, Groth Steffen, Etienne Carissa
Society of International Humanitarian Surgeons, Alpine, NJ 07620, USA.
Arch Surg. 2010 Feb;145(2):154-9. doi: 10.1001/archsurg.2009.263.
Surgical and anesthetic care is increasingly recognized as a neglected but cost-effective component of primary health care in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Strengthening delivery can help achieve Millennium Development Goals 4, 5, and 6. Large gaps in access to essential surgical care in LMICs result in considerable morbidity and mortality. The goal of this study was to provide a baseline overview of essential surgical and anesthetic capacity at district-level health facilities in multiple LMICs.
Survey.
District-level health facilities in multiple LMICs
A standardized World Health Organization tool was used at selected district-level hospitals to assess infrastructure, supplies, and procedures relating to essential surgical and anesthetic capacity. The analysis included facilities from countries that assessed more than 5 health facilities. All data were aggregated and blinded to avoid intercountry comparisons.
Data from 132 facilities were analyzed from 8 countries: Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka (n = 32), Mongolia (n = 31), United Republic of Tanzania (n = 25), Islamic State of Afghanistan (n = 13), Republic of Sierra Leone (n = 11), Republic of Liberia (n = 9), Republic of The Gambia (n = 6), and Democratic Republic of São Tomé and Príncipe (n = 5). Universally, facilities demonstrated shortfalls in basic infrastructure (water, electricity, oxygen) and functioning anesthesia machines. Although 73% of facilities reported performing incision and drainage of abscesses, only 48% were capable of undertaking an appendectomy. In line with Millennium Development Goals 4, 5, and 6, only 32% of facilities performed congenital hernia repairs, 44% of facilities performed cesarean sections, and few facilities always had goggles and aprons to protect surgical health care workers from human immunodeficiency virus.
Enormous shortfalls in infrastructure, supplies, and procedures undertaken are common at district-level health facilities in LMICs.
手术和麻醉护理日益被视为低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)初级卫生保健中一个被忽视但具有成本效益的组成部分。加强其服务提供有助于实现千年发展目标4、5和6。LMICs在获得基本外科护理方面存在巨大差距,导致了相当高的发病率和死亡率。本研究的目的是提供多个LMICs地区级卫生设施基本手术和麻醉能力的基线概述。
调查。
多个LMICs的地区级卫生设施
在选定的地区级医院使用标准化的世界卫生组织工具,评估与基本手术和麻醉能力相关的基础设施、用品和程序。分析包括来自评估了5个以上卫生设施的国家的设施。所有数据进行了汇总并进行了盲法处理,以避免国家间的比较。
分析了来自8个国家的132个设施的数据:斯里兰卡民主社会主义共和国(n = 32)、蒙古(n = 31)、坦桑尼亚联合共和国(n = 25)、阿富汗伊斯兰国(n = 13)、塞拉利昂共和国(n = 11)、利比里亚共和国(n = 9)、冈比亚共和国(n = 6)和圣多美和普林西比民主共和国(n = 5)。普遍而言,这些设施在基本基础设施(水、电、氧气)和可用的麻醉机方面存在不足。虽然73%的设施报告进行了脓肿切开引流,但只有48%的设施能够进行阑尾切除术。符合千年发展目标4、5和6的情况是,只有32%的设施进行先天性疝气修补术,44%的设施进行剖宫产,而且很少有设施始终配备护目镜和围裙以保护外科医护人员免受人类免疫缺陷病毒感染。
LMICs地区级卫生设施在基础设施、用品和开展的程序方面普遍存在巨大不足。