Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.
Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; University of Nebraska School of Medicine, Omaha, NE, USA.
Lancet. 2015 Apr 27;385 Suppl 2:S16. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60811-X. Epub 2015 Apr 26.
The Lancet Commission on Global Surgery calls for universal access to safe, affordable, and timely surgical care. Two requisite components of timely access are (1) the ability to reach a surgical provider in a given timeframe, and (2) the ability to receive appropriately prompt care from that provider. We chose a threshold of 2 h in view of its relevance in time-to-death in post-partum haemorrhage. Here, we use geospatial mapping to enumerate the percentage of a nation's population living within 2 h of a surgeon and the surgeon-to-population ratio for each provider.
Geospatial mapping was used to identify the population living within a 2-h driving distance (access zone) of a health-care facility staffed by a surgeon. Surgeon locations were extracted from Ministries of Health, professional society databases, and published literature for countries which had available data. Data were reviewed by individuals knowledgeable of in-country distribution. Spatial distribution of providers was mapped with Google Maps engine. Access zones were constructed around every provider through estimation of driving times in Google Maps. The number of people living within zones was estimated with the Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center Population Estimation Service. Surgeon-to-population ratios were constructed for every individual access zone and averaged to report a single ratio.
Results (% country's population living within an access zone; average surgeon:population ratio within all access zones) are reported for nine countries with available data: Somaliland (16·9%; 1:118 306), Botswana (31·0%; 1:64 635), Ethiopia (39·6%; 1:229 696), Rwanda (41·3%; 1:158 484), Namibia (43·4%; 1:69 385), Zimbabwe (54%; 1:148 292), Mongolia (55·5%; 1:10 500), Sierra Leone (70·3%; 1:106 742), and Pakistan (84·4%, 1:139 299). Surgeon-to-population ratios vary substantially even within countries; in Sierra Leone, urban access zones have a ratio of 1:45 058 and rural access zones have a ratio of 1:467 929.
Surgical access is poor in many low-income and middle-income countries, even when using a narrow definition of surgical access consisting only of timeliness. Living outside of an access zone makes timely access to surgical care highly unlikely, and in view of low surgeon-to-population ratios and poor prehospital transport, even living within a 2-h access zone might not confer 2-h access. Investments in infrastructure and training must be prioritised to address widespread disparity in access to timely surgery.
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柳叶刀全球外科学委员会呼吁普及安全、负担得起且及时的外科护理。及时获得外科护理的两个必要组成部分是:(1) 在给定的时间内能够联系到外科医生,(2) 能够及时从该医生处获得适当的护理。鉴于产后出血与死亡时间的相关性,我们选择了 2 小时作为时间阈值。在这里,我们使用地理空间映射来计算一个国家的人口中有多少百分比居住在距离外科医生 2 小时车程内的范围内,以及每个医生的医生与人口的比例。
使用地理空间映射来确定居住在由外科医生提供服务的医疗机构 2 小时车程内的人口比例(可达区域)。外科医生的位置是从卫生部、专业协会数据库和已发表的文献中提取的,这些国家都有可用的数据。由熟悉国内分布情况的个人对数据进行了审查。使用 Google Maps 引擎绘制提供者的空间分布。通过在 Google Maps 中估计驾驶时间,在每个提供者周围构建可达区域。使用社会经济数据和应用中心人口估计服务来估计居住在区域内的人数。为每个单独的可达区域构建外科医生与人口的比例,并取平均值以报告单个比例。
报告了 9 个有可用数据的国家的结果(居住在可达区域内的国家人口百分比;所有可达区域内的平均外科医生:人口比例):索马里兰(16.9%;1:118306)、博茨瓦纳(31.0%;1:64635)、埃塞俄比亚(39.6%;1:229696)、卢旺达(41.3%;1:158484)、纳米比亚(43.4%;1:69385)、津巴布韦(54%;1:148292)、蒙古(55.5%;1:10500)、塞拉利昂(70.3%;1:106742)和巴基斯坦(84.4%;1:139299)。即使在一个国家内,外科医生与人口的比例也存在很大差异;在塞拉利昂,城市可达区域的比例为 1:45058,农村可达区域的比例为 1:467929。
即使采用仅包括及时性的狭义外科可达性定义,许多低收入和中等收入国家的外科可达性仍然很差。居住在可达区域之外,极不可能及时获得外科护理,而且鉴于外科医生与人口的比例低,以及院前交通状况不佳,即使居住在 2 小时可达区域内,也不一定能在 2 小时内获得治疗。必须优先投资于基础设施和培训,以解决及时获得外科护理方面的广泛差距。
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