Bolkan Håkon A, Hagander Lars, von Schreeb Johan, Bash-Taqi Donald, Kamara Thaim B, Salvesen Øyvind, Wibe Arne
Department of Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Box 8905, 7491, Trondheim, Norway.
Paediatric Surgery and Global Paediatrics, Department of Paediatrics, Clinical Sciences Lund, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
World J Surg. 2016 Jun;40(6):1344-51. doi: 10.1007/s00268-016-3417-1.
Limited data exist on surgical providers and their scope of practice in low-income countries (LICs). The aim of this study was to assess the distribution and productivity of all surgical providers in an LIC, and to evaluate correlations between the surgical workforce availability, productivity, rates, and volume of surgery at the district and hospital levels.
Data on surgeries and surgical providers from 56 (93.3 %) out of 60 healthcare facilities providing surgery in Sierra Leone in 2012 were retrieved between January and May 2013 from operation theater logbooks and through interviews with key informants.
The Sierra Leonean surgical workforce consisted of 164 full-time positions, equal to 2.7 surgical providers/100,000 inhabitants. Non-specialists performed 52.8 % of all surgeries. In rural areas, the densities of specialists and physicians were 26.8 and 6.3 times lower, respectively, compared with urban areas. The average individual productivity was 2.8 surgeries per week, and varied considerably between the cadres of surgical providers and locations. When excluding four centers that only performed ophthalmic surgery, there was a positive correlation between a facility's volume of surgery and the productivity of its surgical providers (r s = 0.642, p < 0.001).
Less than half of all of the surgery in Sierra Leone is performed by specialists. Surgical providers were significantly more productive in healthcare facilities with higher volumes of surgery. If all surgical providers were as productive as specialists in the private non-profit sector (5.1 procedures/week), the national volume of surgery would increase by 85 %.
关于低收入国家(LICs)外科医疗服务提供者及其执业范围的数据有限。本研究的目的是评估一个低收入国家所有外科医疗服务提供者的分布和生产力,并评估地区和医院层面外科医疗人力可得性、生产力、手术率和手术量之间的相关性。
2013年1月至5月期间,从手术室日志以及与关键信息提供者的访谈中,获取了2012年在塞拉利昂提供手术服务的60家医疗机构中56家(93.3%)的手术和外科医疗服务提供者的数据。
塞拉利昂的外科医疗人力包括164个全职岗位,相当于每10万居民中有2.7名外科医疗服务提供者。非专科医生完成了所有手术的52.8%。在农村地区,专科医生和内科医生的密度分别比城市地区低26.8倍和6.3倍。平均每人每周的手术量为2.8例,且在不同外科医疗服务提供者类别和地点之间差异很大。排除仅进行眼科手术的四个中心后,医疗机构的手术量与其外科医疗服务提供者的生产力之间存在正相关(rs = 0.642,p < 0.001)。
在塞拉利昂,不到一半的手术由专科医生完成。在手术量较高的医疗机构中,外科医疗服务提供者的生产力显著更高。如果所有外科医疗服务提供者都能像私营非营利部门的专科医生一样高效(每周5.1例手术),那么全国的手术量将增加85%。