Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Harvard University Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Surgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Lancet. 2015 Apr 27;385 Suppl 2:S55. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60850-9. Epub 2015 Apr 26.
In the face of staggering global unmet need for surgical care, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) play a substantial part in the surgical workforce, providing surgical care for those who are without it. The number of NGOs providing surgical care in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) is unknown. This information is needed to determine the scope of such care, its contributions to global surgical case volume, to improve collaboration in an effort to maximise efficiency, and to inform national surgical workforce planning. We aimed to create a comprehensive, publicly available catalogue of NGOs providing surgery in LMICs.
We used the United Nations Rule Of Law definition to define NGOs. We included low-income, lower-middle- income, and upper-middle-income countries as defined by World Bank lending groups. Delivery of surgical care by an NGO was defined as the therapeutic manipulation of tissues taking place within an operating room, and was distinguished from the financial or logistical support of such care. We screened an online humanitarian clearing house (ReliefWeb), a large public NGO database (Idealist.org), two surgical volunteerism databases (Operation Giving Back and the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia), and the US State Department Private Volunteer Organizations database, did a review of the literature, and used a social media outlet (Twitter) to identify organisations meeting criteria for inclusion. A complementary analysis additionally provided a list of organisations delivering exclusively surgical care from a search of the OmniMed database, the Foundation Center Online Directory, UK Charity Commission, Australia Charity Commission, New Zealand Charity Commission, and the Canada Revenue Agency Charity Search.
We identified 313 unique organisations, working in all 139 LMICs. Organisations often used more than one model of care and engaged in several surgical specialties. Both short-term surgical missions (206 organisations, 66%) and long-term partnerships (213, 68%) were common models, with 40 organisations (13%) engaging in humanitarian interventions in crisis settings. The most commonly represented specialty was general surgery (120, 38%), but subspecialty surgery such as ophthalmology (88, 28%) and cleft lip and palate surgery (70, 22%) were also frequently performed.
To our knowledge, this is the most complete directory of NGOs undertaking surgery in resource-limited settings in existence. However, it is difficult to determine whether this review is exhaustive. Further work is needed to determine the total and relative contributions of these organisations to global surgical volume. This database will be made available for public use and should be maintained and updated to further coordinate global efforts and maximise impact.
None.
面对全球对手术护理的巨大需求,非政府组织(NGO)在手术队伍中发挥了重要作用,为那些没有手术护理的人提供了手术护理。在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)中,提供手术护理的 NGO 的数量尚不清楚。需要了解这些信息,以确定此类护理的范围,评估其对全球手术量的贡献,改善协作以提高效率,并为国家手术人员规划提供信息。我们旨在创建一个全面的、公开的、提供手术护理的 NGO 目录。
我们使用联合国法治定义来定义 NGO。我们将低收入、中下收入和中上收入国家定义为世界银行贷款组定义的国家。NGO 提供的手术护理定义为在手术室进行的组织的治疗性操作,与这种护理的财务或后勤支持区分开来。我们筛选了一个在线人道主义信息交换所(ReliefWeb)、一个大型公共 NGO 数据库(Idealist.org)、两个手术志愿数据库(Operation Giving Back 和 Society for Pediatric Anesthesia)以及美国国务院私营志愿组织数据库,对文献进行了回顾,并使用社交媒体(Twitter)来确定符合纳入标准的组织。一项补充分析还通过在 OmniMed 数据库、基金会中心在线目录、英国慈善委员会、澳大利亚慈善委员会、新西兰慈善委员会和加拿大税务局慈善搜索中搜索,提供了一份专门提供手术护理的组织名单。
我们确定了 313 个独特的组织,分布在所有 139 个 LMIC 中。组织通常使用多种护理模式,并从事多个外科专业。短期手术任务(206 个组织,66%)和长期合作关系(213 个,68%)都很常见,有 40 个组织(13%)在危机环境中从事人道主义干预。最常见的专业是普通外科(120 个,38%),但也经常进行眼科等专科手术(88 个,28%)和唇腭裂手术(70 个,22%)。
据我们所知,这是现存最完整的资源有限环境下从事手术的 NGO 目录。然而,很难确定这次审查是否详尽无遗。还需要进一步的工作来确定这些组织对全球手术量的总体和相对贡献。这个数据库将供公众使用,并应加以维护和更新,以进一步协调全球努力并最大限度地提高影响力。
无。