Punchak Maria, Mukhopadhyay Swagoto, Sachdev Sonal, Hung Ya-Ching, Peeters Sophie, Rattani Abbas, Dewan Michael, Johnson Walter D, Park Kee B
Global Neurosurgery Initiative, Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA; David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Global Neurosurgery Initiative, Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Department of Surgery, University of Connecticut, Farmington, Connecticut, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2018 Apr;112:e240-e254. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2018.01.029. Epub 2018 Jan 8.
An estimated 5 billion people worldwide lack access to basic surgical care. In particular, the vast majority of low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) currently struggle to provide adequate neurosurgical services. Significant barriers exist, including limited access to trained medical, nursing, and allied health staff; lack of equipment; and availability of services at reasonable distance and at reasonable cost to patients. An accurate assessment of current neurosurgical capacity in LIMCs is an essential first step in tackling this deficit.
To quantify the neurosurgical operational capacity and assess access to neurosurgical services in LMICs, by taking into account the location of workforce and services.
A total of 141 LMICs were contacted and asked to report the number of currently practicing neurosurgeons, access to computed tomographic and magnetic resonance imaging, and availability of neurosurgical equipment (microscope, endoscope, bipolar diathermy, high-speed neurosurgical drill). A proposed World Federation of Neurosurgeons classification was used to stratify cities based on the level of neurosurgical care that could be provided. The data were geocoded and analyzed in Redivis (Redivis Inc.) to assess the percentage of the population covered within a 2-hour travel time of a city offering differing levels of neurosurgical care.
68 countries provided complete data (response rate, 48.2%). Eleven countries reported having no practicing neurosurgeons. The average percentage of the population with access to neurosurgical services within a 2-hour window is 25.26% in sub-Saharan Africa, 62.3% in Latin America and the Caribbean, 29.64% in East Asia and the Pacific, 52.83% in South Asia, 79.65% in the Middle East and North Africa, and 93.3% in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
There are several challenges to the provision of adequate neurosurgical services in low-resource settings. This study used mapping techniques to determine the current global neurosurgical workforce capacity and distribution. We have used our findings to identify areas for improvement. These include increasing and improving neurosurgical training programs worldwide, recruiting students and young physicians into the field, and retaining existing neurosurgeons within their home countries.
据估计,全球有50亿人无法获得基本的外科治疗。特别是,绝大多数低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)目前在提供足够的神经外科服务方面面临困难。存在重大障碍,包括难以获得训练有素的医疗、护理和专职医疗人员;缺乏设备;以及在合理距离内且以合理成本为患者提供服务。准确评估低收入和中等收入国家目前的神经外科能力是解决这一不足的关键第一步。
通过考虑劳动力和服务的地点,量化低收入和中等收入国家的神经外科手术能力,并评估神经外科服务的可及性。
共联系了141个低收入和中等收入国家,要求其报告目前执业的神经外科医生数量、计算机断层扫描和磁共振成像的可及性,以及神经外科设备(显微镜、内窥镜、双极电凝器、高速神经外科钻)的可用性。使用世界神经外科医师联合会提议的分类方法,根据可提供的神经外科护理水平对城市进行分层。数据进行地理编码,并在Redivis(Redivis公司)进行分析,以评估在提供不同水平神经外科护理的城市两小时行程内覆盖的人口百分比。
68个国家提供了完整数据(回复率为48.2%)。11个国家报告没有执业神经外科医生。在撒哈拉以南非洲,两小时内可获得神经外科服务的人口平均百分比为25.26%,在拉丁美洲和加勒比地区为62.3%,在东亚和太平洋地区为29.64%,在南亚为52.83%,在中东和北非为79.65%,在东欧和中亚为93.3%。
在资源匮乏地区提供足够的神经外科服务存在若干挑战。本研究使用地图绘制技术确定了当前全球神经外科劳动力的能力和分布。我们利用研究结果确定了需要改进的领域。这些领域包括在全球范围内增加和改进神经外科培训项目,招募学生和年轻医生进入该领域,以及让现有神经外科医生留在本国。