Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA; Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, USA.
Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA; Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, USA.
Lancet Glob Health. 2015 Jun;3(6):e316-23. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(15)70115-4. Epub 2015 Apr 27.
More than 2 billion people are unable to receive surgical care based on operating theatre density alone. The vision of the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery is universal access to safe, affordable surgical and anaesthesia care when needed. We aimed to estimate the number of individuals worldwide without access to surgical services as defined by the Commission's vision.
We modelled access to surgical services in 196 countries with respect to four dimensions: timeliness, surgical capacity, safety, and affordability. We built a chance tree for each country to model the probability of surgical access with respect to each dimension, and from this we constructed a statistical model to estimate the proportion of the population in each country that does not have access to surgical services. We accounted for uncertainty with one-way sensitivity analyses, multiple imputation for missing data, and probabilistic sensitivity analysis.
At least 4·8 billion people (95% posterior credible interval 4·6-5·0 [67%, 64-70]) of the world's population do not have access to surgery. The proportion of the population without access varied widely when stratified by epidemiological region: greater than 95% of the population in south Asia and central, eastern, and western sub-Saharan Africa do not have access to care, whereas less than 5% of the population in Australasia, high-income North America, and western Europe lack access.
Most of the world's population does not have access to surgical care, and access is inequitably distributed. The near absence of access in many low-income and middle-income countries represents a crisis, and as the global health community continues to support the advancement of universal health coverage, increasing access to surgical services will play a central role in ensuring health care for all.
None.
仅根据手术室密度,就有超过 20 亿人无法获得外科护理。柳叶刀全球外科学委员会的愿景是在需要时为所有人提供安全、负担得起的外科和麻醉护理。我们旨在根据委员会的愿景,估计全球无法获得外科服务的人数。
我们针对四个维度(及时性、手术能力、安全性和可负担性)对 196 个国家的外科服务获取情况进行建模。我们为每个国家构建了一个机会树,以针对每个维度建模手术获取的概率,从这个树中我们构建了一个统计模型来估计每个国家无法获得外科服务的人口比例。我们通过单向敏感性分析、缺失数据的多重插补和概率敏感性分析来考虑不确定性。
世界人口中至少有 48 亿人(95%后验可信区间为 46-50[67%,64-70])无法获得手术。按流行病学区域分层时,无法获得手术的人口比例差异很大:南亚以及中、东、西非撒哈拉以南地区的 95%以上的人口无法获得护理,而澳大拉西亚、高收入北美和西欧的人口中不到 5%的人无法获得护理。
世界上大多数人口无法获得外科护理,并且获得服务的机会分布不均。许多低收入和中等收入国家几乎没有获得手术的机会,这代表了一场危机,随着全球卫生界继续支持普及保健的推进,增加获得外科服务的机会将在确保全民保健方面发挥核心作用。
无。