Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care, University of California, San Francisco, 513 Parnassus Avenue, Room S-436, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.
World J Surg. 2013 Mar;37(3):488-97. doi: 10.1007/s00268-012-1848-x.
Surgery and perioperative care have been neglected in the arena of global health despite evidence of cost-effectiveness and the growing, substantial burden of surgical conditions. Various approaches to address the surgical disease crisis have been reported. This article describes the strategy of Global Partners in Anesthesia and Surgery (GPAS), an academically based, capacity-building collaboration between North American and Ugandan teaching institutions.
The collaboration's projects shift away from the trainee exchange, equipment donation, and clinical service delivery models. Instead, it focuses on three locally identified objectives to improve surgical and perioperative care capacity in Uganda: workforce expansion, research, collaboration.
Recruitment programs from 2007 to 2011 helped increase the number of surgery and anesthesia trainees at Mulago Hospital (Kampala, Uganda) from 20 to 40 and 2 to 19, respectively. All sponsored trainees successfully graduated and remained in the region. Postgraduate academic positions were created and filled to promote workforce retention. A local research agenda was developed, more than 15 collaborative, peer-reviewed papers have been published, and the first competitive research grant for a principal investigator in the Department of Surgery at Mulago was obtained. A local projects coordinator position and an annual conference were created and jointly funded by partnering international efforts to promote collaboration.
Sub-Saharan Africa has profound unmet needs in surgery and perioperative care. This academically based model helped increase recruitment of trainees, expanded local research, and strengthened stakeholder collaboration in Uganda. Further analysis is underway to determine the impact on surgical disease burden and other important outcome measures.
尽管有成本效益的证据,以及手术条件的负担越来越大,但手术和围手术期护理在全球卫生领域一直被忽视。已经报道了各种解决手术疾病危机的方法。本文描述了全球麻醉与手术伙伴关系(Global Partners in Anesthesia and Surgery,简称 GPAS)的策略,这是一个以北美洲和乌干达教学机构为基础的、具有能力建设性质的合作关系。
该合作关系的项目不再采用学员交流、设备捐赠和临床服务提供模式,而是侧重于三个在乌干达当地确定的目标,以提高外科和围手术期护理能力:扩大劳动力、研究、合作。
2007 年至 2011 年的招聘计划帮助将穆拉戈医院(坎帕拉,乌干达)的外科和麻醉学员人数从 20 人增加到 40 人,从 2 人增加到 19 人。所有受赞助的学员都成功毕业并留在该地区。创建了研究生学术职位,并填补了这些职位,以促进劳动力保留。制定了当地的研究议程,发表了超过 15 篇合作的、经过同行评审的论文,并为穆拉戈医院外科系的第一位首席研究员获得了第一笔竞争性研究资助。创建了一个当地项目协调员职位和一个年度会议,并由合作的国际努力共同资助,以促进合作。
撒哈拉以南非洲地区在外科和围手术期护理方面存在巨大的未满足需求。这种以学术为基础的模式有助于增加学员的招募,扩大当地的研究,并加强乌干达的利益相关者合作。正在进行进一步的分析,以确定对手术疾病负担和其他重要结果衡量标准的影响。