Citron Isabelle, Chokotho Linda, Lavy Chris
Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Beit Cure International Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi.
World J Surg. 2016 Apr;40(4):779-83. doi: 10.1007/s00268-015-3333-9.
Disease amenable to surgical intervention accounts for 11-15 % of world disability and there is increasing interest in surgery as a global public health issue. National Health Strategic Plans (NHSPs) reflect countries' long-term health priorities, plans and targets. These plans were analysed to assess the prioritisation of surgery as a public health issue in Africa.
NHSPs of 43 independent Sub-Saharan African countries available in the public domain in March 2014 in French or English were searched electronically for key terms: surg*, ortho*, trauma, cancer, appendic*, laparotomy, HIV, tuberculosis, malaria. They were then searched manually for disease prevalence, targets, and human resources.
19 % of NHSPs had no mention of surgery or surgical conditions. 63 % had five or less mentions of surgery. HIV and malaria had 3772 mentions across all the policies, compared to surgery with only 376 mentions. Trauma had 239 mentions, while the common surgical conditions of appendicitis, laparotomy and hernia had no mentions at all. Over 95 % of NHSPs specifically mentioned the prevalence of HIV, tuberculosis, malaria, infant mortality and maternal mortality. Whereas, the most commonly mentioned surgical condition for which a prevalence was given was trauma, in only 47 % of policies. All NHSPs had plans and measurable targets for the reduction of HIV and tuberculosis. Of the total 4064 health targets, only 2 % were related to surgical conditions or surgical care. 33 % of policies had no surgical targets.
NHSPs are the best available measure of health service and planning priorities. It is clear from our findings that surgery is poorly represented and that surgical conditions and surgical treatment are not widely recognised as a public health priority. Greater prioritisation of surgery in national health strategic policies is required to build resilient surgical systems.
适合手术干预的疾病占全球残疾人口的11% - 15%,手术作为一个全球公共卫生问题正受到越来越多的关注。国家卫生战略计划(NHSPs)反映了各国的长期卫生重点、计划和目标。对这些计划进行了分析,以评估手术作为非洲公共卫生问题的优先程度。
通过电子检索2014年3月可在公共领域获取的43个撒哈拉以南非洲独立国家的以法语或英语编写的国家卫生战略计划,查找关键词:surg*、ortho*、创伤、癌症、appendic*、剖腹术、艾滋病毒、结核病、疟疾。然后人工查找疾病患病率、目标和人力资源。
19%的国家卫生战略计划未提及手术或手术相关病症。63%的计划提及手术的次数不超过五次。在所有政策中,艾滋病毒和疟疾被提及3772次,而手术仅被提及376次。创伤被提及239次,而阑尾炎、剖腹术和疝气等常见手术病症则完全未被提及。超过95%的国家卫生战略计划特别提到了艾滋病毒、结核病、疟疾、婴儿死亡率和孕产妇死亡率。而给出患病率的最常被提及的手术病症是创伤,仅在47%的政策中出现。所有国家卫生战略计划都有减少艾滋病毒和结核病的计划及可衡量目标。在总共4064个卫生目标中,只有2%与手术病症或手术护理相关。33%的政策没有手术目标。
国家卫生战略计划是衡量卫生服务和规划重点的最佳现有指标。从我们的研究结果可以明显看出,手术的代表性不足,手术病症和手术治疗未被广泛视为公共卫生重点。需要在国家卫生战略政策中更优先考虑手术,以建立有韧性的手术系统。