Varela Carlos, Young Sven, Groen Reinou, Banza Leonard, Mkandawire Nyengo C, Viste Asgaut
Kamuzu Central Hospital, Lilongwe, Malawi.
Lilongwe Campus, College of Medicine, University of Malawi, Lilongwe, Malawi.
Malawi Med J. 2017 Sep;29(3):231-236. doi: 10.4314/mmj.v29i3.1.
Noncommunicable diseases, such as surgical conditions have received little attention from public health planners in low income countries (LIC) like Malawi. Though increasingly recognised as a growing global health problem, the burden of surgical pathologies and access to surgical care has not been adequately identified in many LIC. Information on the spectrum and burden of surgical disease in Malawi is important to uncover the unmet need for surgery and for planning of the National Health Service.
This was a multistage random cluster sampling national survey. Households were selected from clusters using probability proportional to size method. 1448 households and 2909 interviewees were analysed. The Surgeons Overseas Assessment of Surgical need (SOSAS) tool was used to collect data. This electronic tablet based questionnaire tool included general information and a dual personalised head to toe inquiry on surgical conditions. The general information included number of household members, and inquired on any death within the past twelve months, and if any of the deaths in the family had a suspected surgical condition leading to that death. Data was collected by specially trained third year medical students.
Out of 1480 selected households, 1448 (98%) agreed to participate, with 2909 interviewed individuals included in the study. The median household size was 6 individuals (range 1 - 47). Median age of interviewed persons was 35 years (range 0.25 - 104 years). 1027 out of 2909 (35%) of the interviewed people reported to be living with a condition requiring surgical consultation or intervention, whereas 146 of 616 (24%) of the total deaths reported to have occurred in the preceding 12 months were reported to have died from a surgically related condition. Most individuals did not seek health care due to lack of funds for transportation to the health facility. Only 3.1% of those that reported a surgical condition had surgical intervention.
There is a large unmet need for surgical care in Malawi. A third of the population is living with a condition needing surgical consultation or intervention, and a quarter of all deaths are potentially avoidable with surgery. Urgent scale up of surgical services and training are needed to reduce this huge gap in public health planning in the country.
在马拉维等低收入国家,诸如外科疾病等非传染性疾病很少受到公共卫生规划者的关注。尽管外科疾病日益被视为一个日益严重的全球健康问题,但许多低收入国家尚未充分确定外科疾病的负担以及获得外科护理的情况。了解马拉维外科疾病的范围和负担信息对于发现未满足的手术需求以及规划国家卫生服务至关重要。
这是一项多阶段随机整群抽样的全国性调查。采用与规模成比例的概率方法从各个群组中选取家庭。对1448户家庭和2909名受访者进行了分析。使用海外外科医生手术需求评估(SOSAS)工具收集数据。这个基于电子平板电脑的问卷工具包括一般信息以及针对外科疾病的从头到脚的双重个性化询问。一般信息包括家庭成员数量,并询问过去十二个月内是否有任何死亡情况,以及家庭中的任何死亡是否有疑似导致死亡的外科疾病。数据由经过专门培训的三年级医学生收集。
在1480个选定的家庭中,1448户(98%)同意参与,研究纳入了2909名受访个体。家庭规模中位数为6人(范围1 - 47人)。受访者的年龄中位数为35岁(范围0.25 - 104岁)。2909名受访者中有1027人(35%)报告患有需要外科咨询或干预的疾病,而在前12个月报告的616例死亡中,有146例(24%)据报告死于与外科相关的疾病。大多数人由于缺乏前往医疗机构的交通费用而未寻求医疗保健。报告患有外科疾病的人中只有3.1%接受了手术干预。
马拉维对外科护理存在大量未满足的需求。三分之一的人口患有需要外科咨询或干预的疾病,并且四分之一的死亡通过手术可能是可以避免的。需要紧急扩大外科服务并加强培训,以缩小该国公共卫生规划中的这一巨大差距。