Martin Janet, Tau Goa, Cherian Meena Nathan, Vergel de Dios Jennifer, Mills David, Fitzpatrick Jane, Adu-Krow William, Cheng Davy
Department of Anesthesia & Perioperative Medicine, Medical Evidence, Decision Integrity & Clinical Impact (MEDICI) Centre, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
National Department of Health (NDoH), National Health Service Standards, Waigani, Papua New Guinea.
BMJ Open. 2015 Dec 16;5(12):e009841. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009841.
To assess capacity to provide essential surgical services including emergency, obstetric and anaesthesia care in Papua New Guinea (PNG) in order to support planning for relevant post-2015 sustainable development goals for PNG.
Cross-sectional survey.
Hospitals and health facilities in PNG.
21 facilities including 3 national/provincial hospitals, 11 district/rural hospitals, and 7 health centres.
The WHO Situational Analysis Tool to Assess Emergency and Essential Surgical Care (WHO-SAT) was used to measure each participating facility's capacity to deliver essential surgery and anaesthesia services, including 108 items related to relevant infrastructure, human resources, interventions and equipment.
While major surgical procedures were provided at each hospital, fewer than 30% had uninterrupted access to oxygen, and 57% had uninterrupted access to resuscitation bag and mask. Most hospitals reported capacity to provide general anaesthesia, though few hospitals reported having at least one certified surgeon, obstetrician and anaesthesiologist. Access to anaesthetic machines, pulse oximetry and blood bank was severely limited. Many non-hospital health centres providing basic surgical procedures, but almost none had uninterrupted access to electricity, running water, oxygen and basic supplies for resuscitation, airway management and obstetric services.
Capacity for essential surgery and anaesthesia services is severely limited in PNG due to shortfalls in physical infrastructure, human resources, and basic equipment and supplies. Achieving post-2015 sustainable development goals, including universal healthcare, will require significant investment in surgery and anaesthesia capacity in PNG.
评估巴布亚新几内亚(PNG)提供包括急诊、产科和麻醉护理在内的基本外科服务的能力,以支持PNG 2015年后相关可持续发展目标的规划。
横断面调查。
PNG的医院和卫生设施。
21个机构,包括3家国家/省级医院、11家地区/农村医院和7家卫生中心。
采用世界卫生组织紧急和基本外科护理评估情况分析工具(WHO-SAT)来衡量每个参与机构提供基本外科手术和麻醉服务的能力,包括与相关基础设施、人力资源、干预措施和设备有关的108项指标。
虽然每家医院都能进行主要外科手术,但不到30%的医院能持续获得氧气供应,57%的医院能持续获得复苏袋和面罩。大多数医院报告有提供全身麻醉的能力,不过很少有医院报告至少有一名经过认证的外科医生、产科医生和麻醉医生。麻醉机、脉搏血氧仪和血库的使用受到严重限制。许多非医院卫生中心可提供基本外科手术,但几乎没有一个能持续获得电力、自来水、氧气以及用于复苏、气道管理和产科服务的基本用品。
由于物质基础设施、人力资源以及基本设备和用品的短缺,PNG的基本外科手术和麻醉服务能力严重受限。要实现2015年后的可持续发展目标,包括全民医疗保健,PNG需要在外科手术和麻醉能力方面进行大量投资。