Grudziak Joana, Gallaher Jared, Banza Leonard, Cairns Bruce, Varela Carlos, Young Sven, Charles Anthony
Department of Surgery, UNC School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 4008 Burnett Womack Building, CB 7228, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Department of Surgery, Kamuzu Central Hospital, Lilongwe, Malawi.
World J Surg. 2017 Dec;41(12):3031-3037. doi: 10.1007/s00268-017-4272-4.
To address the need for more surgical providers in low-resource settings, a collaboration to create a surgical residency-training program for local Malawian physicians was established in 2009. This study sought to describe the short-term independent effect of a surgical residency program on trauma mortality at a tertiary trauma center in sub-Saharan Africa.
We conducted a retrospective analysis of all patients recorded in the trauma surveillance registry of Kamuzu Central Hospital in Lilongwe, Malawi, from 2009 (three residents) through 2014 (11 residents). Log-binominal regression modeling was used to compare the risk ratio of death compared to the referent year of 2009, when the program was started, after adjusting for relevant covariates. Primary injury type was used as a surrogate for injury severity.
In total, 82,534 patients were recorded into the KCH Trauma Registry during the study period. Mean age was 23.1 years (SD 15.7) with a male preponderance (72.1%). Trauma patient volume increased from 8725 patients in 2009 to 15,998 patients in 2014. Each year had a significantly decreased risk of death compared to 2009 when adjusted for primary injury type, age, and gender, with an adjusted risk ratio of 0.73 (95% CI 0.58, 0.90) in 2010 and 0.52 (95% CI 0.43, 0.62) in 2014.
The global burden of surgical diseases cannot be attenuated in the presence of an inadequate surgical workforce. After institution of a surgery residency program, adjusted injury-associated mortality decreased each year despite substantial increases in trauma patient volume. In low-resource settings, establishment of a surgical residency program significantly improves trauma-associated outcomes.
为满足资源匮乏地区对更多外科医疗人员的需求,2009年开展了一项合作,为马拉维当地医生创建外科住院医师培训项目。本研究旨在描述撒哈拉以南非洲一家三级创伤中心的外科住院医师项目对创伤死亡率的短期独立影响。
我们对2009年(三名住院医师)至2014年(十一名住院医师)期间在马拉维利隆圭的卡穆祖中央医院创伤监测登记处记录的所有患者进行了回顾性分析。在调整相关协变量后,使用对数二项回归模型比较与项目启动的2009年相比的死亡风险比。主要损伤类型用作损伤严重程度的替代指标。
在研究期间,卡穆祖中央医院创伤登记处共记录了82534名患者。平均年龄为23.1岁(标准差15.7),男性占多数(72.1%)。创伤患者数量从2009年的8725例增加到2014年的15998例。在根据主要损伤类型、年龄和性别进行调整后,与2009年相比,每年的死亡风险均显著降低,2010年的调整风险比为0.73(95%可信区间0.58, 0.90),2014年为0.52(95%可信区间0.43, 0.62)。
在外科医疗人员不足的情况下,外科疾病的全球负担无法减轻。实施外科住院医师项目后,尽管创伤患者数量大幅增加,但调整后的与损伤相关的死亡率每年都在下降。在资源匮乏地区,建立外科住院医师项目可显著改善与创伤相关的结局。