Department of Clinical Sciences in Lund, Paediatric Surgery and Global Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Discovery Health, Sandton, and Department of Anaesthesiology, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Br J Surg. 2015 Aug;102(9):1142-9. doi: 10.1002/bjs.9845. Epub 2015 Jun 8.
In high-income countries, non-communicable diseases drive the demand for surgical healthcare. Middle-income countries face a double disease burden, of both communicable and non-communicable disease. The aim of this study was to describe the role of surgery for the in-hospital care of infectious conditions in the high-income country Sweden and the middle-income country South Africa.
A retrospective cohort study was performed of 1.4 million infectious disease admissions. The study populations were the entire population of Sweden, and a cohort of 3.5 million South Africans with private healthcare insurance, during a 7-year interval. The outcome measures were frequency of surgical procedures across a spectrum of diseases, and sex and age during the medical care event.
Some 8.1 per cent of Swedish and 15.7 per cent of South African hospital admissions were because of infectious disease. The proportion of infectious disease admissions that were associated with surgery was constant over time: 8.0 (95 per cent c.i. 7.9 to 8.1) per cent in Sweden and 21.1 (21.0 to 21.2) per cent in South Africa. The frequency of surgery was 2.6 (2.6 to 2.7) times greater in South Africa, and 2.2 (2.2 to 2.3) times higher after standardization for age, sex and disease category.
The study suggests that surgical care is required to manage patients with communicable diseases, even in high-income settings with efficient prevention and functional primary care. These results further stress the importance of scaling up functional surgical health systems in low- and middle-income countries, where the disease burden is distinguished by infectious disease.
在高收入国家,非传染性疾病推动了对外科医疗保健的需求。中等收入国家面临着传染性和非传染性疾病的双重疾病负担。本研究的目的是描述在高收入国家瑞典和中等收入国家南非,外科手术在医院内治疗传染病中的作用。
对 140 万例传染病住院患者进行了回顾性队列研究。研究人群为瑞典的全部人口,以及南非拥有私人医疗保险的 350 万人群,在 7 年的时间间隔内。研究的结果是各种疾病的手术频率,以及医疗过程中的性别和年龄。
瑞典有 8.1%的住院患者和南非有 15.7%的住院患者是因为传染病。与手术相关的传染病住院患者比例在一段时间内保持不变:瑞典为 8.0%(95%置信区间为 7.9%至 8.1%),南非为 21.1%(21.0%至 21.2%)。南非的手术频率高 2.6 倍(2.6 至 2.7),标准化后的年龄、性别和疾病分类后高 2.2 倍(2.2 至 2.3)。
该研究表明,即使在预防和功能初级保健效率高的高收入环境中,也需要外科护理来治疗传染病患者。这些结果进一步强调了在传染病负担明显的中低收入国家扩大功能外科卫生系统的重要性。