Guest Glenn D, Scott David F, Xavier Joao P, Martins Nelson, Vreede Eric, Chennal Antony, Moss Daliah, Watters David A
Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, RACS Global Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
University Hospital Geelong, Deakin University and Barwon Health, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
ANZ J Surg. 2017 Jun;87(6):436-440. doi: 10.1111/ans.13768. Epub 2016 Sep 20.
Timor-Leste suffered a destructive withdrawal by the Indonesian military in 1999, leaving only 20 Timorese-based doctors and no practising specialists for a population of 700 000 that has now grown to 1.2 million.
This article assesses the outcomes and impact of Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (RACS) specialist medical support from 2001 to 2015. Three programmes were designed collaboratively with the Timor-Leste Ministry of Health and Australian Aid. The RACS team began to provide 24/7 resident surgical and anaesthesia services in the capital, Dili, from July 2001. The arrival of the Chinese and Cuban Medical Teams provided a medical workforce, and the Cubans initiated undergraduate medical training for about 1000 nationals both in Cuba and in Timor-Leste, whilst RACS focused on specialist medical training.
Australian Aid provided AUD$20 million through three continuous programmes over 15 years. In the first 10 years over 10 000 operations were performed. Initially only 10% of operations were done by trainees but this reached 77% by 2010. Twenty-one nurse anaesthetists were trained in-country, sufficient to cover the needs of each hospital. Seven Timorese doctors gained specialist qualifications (five surgery, one ophthalmology and one anaesthesia) from regional medical schools in Papua New Guinea, Fiji, Indonesia and Malaysia. They introduced local specialist and family medicine diploma programmes for the Cuban graduates.
Timor-Leste has developed increasing levels of surgical and anaesthetic self-sufficiency through multi-level collaboration between the Ministry of Health, Universidade Nacional de Timor Lorosa'e, and sustained, consistent support from external donors including Australian Aid, Cuba and RACS.
1999年,东帝汶遭受了印度尼西亚军队的毁灭性撤离,当时仅剩下20名东帝汶本地医生,且没有执业专科医生,而该国当时有70万人口,如今已增长至120万。
本文评估了2001年至2015年澳大利亚皇家外科学院(RACS)专科医疗支持的成果及影响。与东帝汶卫生部和澳大利亚援助机构合作设计了三个项目。RACS团队自2001年7月起开始在首都帝力提供全天候住院手术和麻醉服务。中国和古巴医疗队的到来提供了医疗人力,古巴方面在古巴和东帝汶为约1000名东帝汶国民开展了本科医学培训,而RACS则专注于专科医学培训。
澳大利亚援助机构在15年里通过三个连续项目提供了2000万澳元。在最初的10年里实施了超过10000例手术。最初只有10%的手术由实习医生完成,但到2010年这一比例达到了77%。在国内培训了21名护士麻醉师,足以满足每家医院的需求。7名东帝汶医生在巴布亚新几内亚、斐济、印度尼西亚和马来西亚的地区医学院获得了专科资格(5名外科、1名眼科和1名麻醉科)。他们为古巴毕业生引入了本地专科和家庭医学文凭课程。
通过卫生部、东帝汶国立大学之间的多层次合作,以及包括澳大利亚援助机构、古巴和RACS在内的外部捐助者持续、一致的支持,东帝汶在手术和麻醉方面的自给自足水平不断提高。