Goodman Laura F, St-Louis Etienne, Yousef Yasmine, Cheung Maija, Ure Benno, Ozgediz Doruk, Ameh Emmanuel Adoyi, Bickler Stephen, Poenaru Dan, Oldham Keith, Farmer Diana, Lakhoo Kokila
Department of Surgery, University of California Davis, Sacramento, California, United States.
Department of General Surgery, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Eur J Pediatr Surg. 2018 Feb;28(1):51-59. doi: 10.1055/s-0037-1604399. Epub 2017 Aug 14.
The Lancet Commission on Global Surgery reported that 5 billion people lack access to safe, affordable surgical care. The majority of these people live in low-resource settings, where up to 50% of the population is children. (Debas HTP, Donkor A, Gawande DT, Jamison ME, Kruk, and Mock CN, editors. Essential Surgery. Disease Control Priorities. Third Edition, vol 1. Essential Surgery. Washington, DC: World Bank; 2015) on surgery included guidelines for the improvement of access to surgical care; however, these lack detail for children's surgery.
To produce guidance for low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) on the resources required for children's surgery at each level of hospital care.
The Global Initiative for Children's Surgery (GICS) held an inaugural meeting at the Royal College of Surgeons in London in May 2016, with 52 surgical providers from 21 countries, including 27 providers from 18 LMICs. Delegates engaged in working groups over 2 days to prioritize needs and solutions for optimizing children's surgical care; these were categorized into infrastructure, service delivery, training, and research. At a second GICS meeting in Washington in October 2016, 94 surgical care providers, half from LMICs, defined the optimal resources required at primary, secondary, tertiary, and national referral level through a series of working group engagements.
Consensus solutions for optimizing children's surgical care included the following: · Establishing standards and integrating them into national surgical plans.. · Each country should have at least one children's hospital.. · Designate, facilitate, and support regional training hubs covering all. · children's surgical specialties.. · Establish regional research support centers.. An "Optimal Resources" document was produced detailing the facilities and resources required at each level of care.
The Optimal Resources document has been produced by surgical providers from LMICs who have the greatest insight into the needs and priorities in their population. The document will be refined further through online GICS Working Groups and the World Health Organization for broad application to ensure all children have timely access to safe surgical care.
《柳叶刀》全球外科委员会报告称,50亿人无法获得安全、可负担的外科治疗。这些人大多生活在资源匮乏地区,其中多达50%的人口为儿童。(德巴斯·HTP、唐科尔·A、高文德·DT、贾米森·ME、克鲁克以及莫克·CN编辑。《基本外科手术》。《疾病控制优先事项》。第三版,第1卷。《基本外科手术》。华盛顿特区:世界银行;2015年)关于外科手术的内容包括改善外科治疗可及性的指南;然而,这些指南缺乏针对儿童手术的详细内容。
为低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)制定关于各级医院儿童手术所需资源的指导意见。
全球儿童外科倡议组织(GICS)于2016年5月在伦敦皇家外科医学院召开了首次会议,来自21个国家的52名外科服务提供者参加,其中包括来自18个低收入和中等收入国家的27名提供者。代表们在两天内参与工作组,确定优化儿童外科治疗的需求和解决方案的优先次序;这些需求和解决方案分为基础设施、服务提供、培训和研究。在2016年10月于华盛顿召开的第二次GICS会议上,94名外科护理提供者(其中一半来自低收入和中等收入国家)通过一系列工作组活动确定了初级、二级、三级和国家转诊层面所需的最佳资源。
优化儿童外科治疗的共识性解决方案包括以下内容:·制定标准并将其纳入国家外科计划。·每个国家应至少有一家儿童医院。·指定、促进并支持覆盖所有儿童外科专科的区域培训中心。·建立区域研究支持中心。编制了一份“最佳资源”文件,详细列出了各级护理所需设施和资源。
“最佳资源”文件由对本国人口的需求和优先事项最有洞察力的低收入和中等收入国家的外科服务提供者编制。该文件将通过GICS在线工作组和世界卫生组织进一步完善,以便广泛应用,确保所有儿童都能及时获得安全的外科治疗。