Yousef Yasmine, St-Louis Etienne, Baird Robert, Smith Emily R, Guadagno Elena, St-Vil Dickens, Poenaru Dan
McGill University Health Center, Division of Pediatric General and Thoracic Surgery, Montreal Children's Hospital; Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal, Hôpital Sainte-Justine, Département de chirurgie générale pédiatrique.
McGill University Health Center, Division of Pediatric General and Thoracic Surgery, Montreal Children's Hospital.
J Pediatr Surg. 2019 Apr;54(4):831-837. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2018.11.005. Epub 2018 Dec 13.
The Lancet Commission on Global Surgery highlighted global surgical need but offered little insight into the specific surgical challenges of children in low-resource settings. Efforts to strengthen the quality of global pediatric surgical care have resulted in a proliferation of partnerships between low-and middle-income countries (LMICs) and high-income countries (HICs). Standardized tools able to reliably measure gaps in delivery and quality of care are important aids for these partnerships. We undertook a systematic review (SR) of capacity assessment tools (CATs) focused on needs assessment in pediatric surgery.
A comprehensive search strategy of multiple electronic databases was conducted per PRISMA guidelines without linguistic or temporal restrictions. CATs were selected according to pre-defined inclusion criteria. Articles were assessed by two independent reviewers. Methodological quality of studies was appraised using the COSMIN checklist with 4-point scale.
The search strategy generated 16,641 original publications, of which three CATs were deemed eligible. Eligible tools were either excessively detailed or oversimplified. None used weighted scores to identify finer granularity between institutions. No CATs comprehensively included measures of resources, outcomes, accessibility/impact and training.
The results of this study identify the need for a CAT capable of objectively measuring key aspects of surgical capacity and performance in a weighted tool designed for pediatric surgical centers in LMICs.
Systematic Review.
II.
《柳叶刀》全球外科委员会强调了全球外科需求,但对于资源匮乏地区儿童所面临的具体外科挑战却鲜有深入见解。为提高全球儿科外科护理质量所做的努力,导致低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)与高收入国家(HICs)之间的伙伴关系激增。能够可靠衡量护理提供和质量差距的标准化工具,是这些伙伴关系的重要辅助手段。我们针对专注于儿科手术需求评估的能力评估工具(CATs)进行了一项系统评价(SR)。
按照PRISMA指南,对多个电子数据库进行全面检索,无语言或时间限制。根据预先定义的纳入标准选择CATs。由两名独立评审员对文章进行评估。使用带有4分制的COSMIN清单评估研究的方法学质量。
检索策略共产生16,641篇原始出版物,其中有三种CATs被认为符合条件。符合条件的工具要么过于详细,要么过于简化。没有一个使用加权分数来识别机构之间更细微的差异。没有一个CATs全面纳入资源、结果、可及性/影响和培训的衡量指标。
本研究结果表明,需要一种能够在为LMICs的儿科手术中心设计的加权工具中,客观衡量手术能力和绩效关键方面的CATs。
系统评价。
II级。