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乌干达获得安全、及时且可负担的外科护理:对全国公共部门外科手术能力和核心外科指标的分层随机评估。

Access to Safe, Timely, and Affordable Surgical Care in Uganda: A Stratified Randomized Evaluation of Nationwide Public Sector Surgical Capacity and Core Surgical Indicators.

作者信息

Albutt Katherine, Punchak Maria, Kayima Peter, Namanya Didacus B, Anderson Geoffrey A, Shrime Mark G

机构信息

Program in Global Surgery and Social Change (PGSSC), Harvard Medical School, 641 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.

Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), Boston, MA, USA.

出版信息

World J Surg. 2018 Aug;42(8):2303-2313. doi: 10.1007/s00268-018-4485-1.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Access to safe surgery is critical to health, welfare, and economic development. In 2015, the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery recommended that all countries collect surgical indicators to lend insight into improving surgical care. No nationwide high-quality data exist for these metrics in Uganda.

METHODS

A standardized quantitative hospital assessment and a semi-structured interview were administered to key stakeholders at 17 randomly selected public hospitals. Hospital walk-throughs and retrospective reviews of operative logbooks were completed.

RESULTS

This study captured information for public hospitals serving 64.0% of Uganda's population. On average, <25% of the population had 2 h access to a surgically capable facility. Hospitals averaged 257 beds/facilities and there were 0.2 operating rooms per 100,000 people. Annual surgical volume was 144.5 cases per 100,000 people per year. Surgical, anesthetic, and obstetrician physician workforce density was 0.3 per 100,000 people. Most hospitals reported having electricity, oxygen, and blood available more than half the time and running water available at least three quarters of the time. In total, 93.8% of facilities never had access to a CT scan. Sterile gloves, nasogastric tubes, and Foley catheters were frequently unavailable. Uniform outcome reporting does not exist, and the WHO safe surgery checklist is not utilized.

CONCLUSION

The Ugandan public hospital system does not meet LCoGS targets for surgical access, workforce, or surgical volume. Critical policy and programmatic developments are essential to build surgical capacity and facilitate provision of safe, timely, and affordable surgical care. Surgery must become a public health priority in Uganda and other low resource settings.

摘要

背景

获得安全的外科手术对于健康、福祉和经济发展至关重要。2015年,《柳叶刀》全球外科委员会建议所有国家收集外科手术指标,以深入了解如何改善外科护理。乌干达没有关于这些指标的全国性高质量数据。

方法

对17家随机选择的公立医院的关键利益相关者进行了标准化的定量医院评估和半结构化访谈。完成了医院巡查和手术日志的回顾性审查。

结果

本研究获取了为乌干达64.0%人口服务的公立医院的信息。平均而言,不到25%的人口能够在2小时内到达具备手术能力的机构。医院平均每所机构有257张床位,每10万人有0.2间手术室。每年每10万人的手术量为144.5例。外科、麻醉和产科医生的劳动力密度为每10万人0.3人。大多数医院报告称,电力、氧气和血液供应一半以上时间可用,自来水供应至少四分之三时间可用。总体而言,93.8%的机构从未有过CT扫描设备。无菌手套、鼻胃管和导尿管经常无法获得。不存在统一的结果报告,也未使用世界卫生组织的安全手术检查表。

结论

乌干达公立医院系统未达到全球外科委员会在手术可及性、劳动力或手术量方面的目标。关键的政策和项目发展对于建设手术能力以及促进提供安全、及时和可负担的外科护理至关重要。在乌干达和其他资源匮乏地区,外科手术必须成为公共卫生的优先事项。

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