Department of Surgery, Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, USA.
Int J Health Policy Manag. 2021 Mar 14;10(4):211-214. doi: 10.34172/ijhpm.2020.26.
As global attention to improve the quality, safety and access to surgical care in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) increases, the need for evidence-based strategies to reliably scale-up the quality and quantity of surgical services becomes ever more pertinent. Iversen et al discuss the optimal distribution of surgical services, whether through decentralization or regionalization, and propose a strategy that utilizes the dimensions of acuity, complexity and prevalence of surgical conditions to inform national priorities. Proposed expansion of this strategy to encompass levels of scale-up prioritization is discussed in this commentary. The decentralization of emergency obstetric services in LMICs shows promising results and should be further explored. The dearth of evidence of regionalization in LMICs, on the other hand, limits extrapolation of lessons learned. Nevertheless, principles from the successful regionalization of certain services such as trauma care in high-income countries (HICs) can be adapted to LMIC settings and can provide the backbone for innovation in service delivery and safety.
随着全球对提高中低收入国家(LMICs)外科护理质量、安全性和可及性的关注度不断提高,需要制定基于证据的策略来可靠地扩大外科服务的质量和数量。Iversen 等人讨论了外科服务的最佳分布方式,无论是通过去中心化还是区域化,并提出了一种利用手术条件的紧急程度、复杂性和普遍性来确定国家优先事项的策略。本文讨论了将这一策略扩展到涵盖扩展优先级水平的问题。在 LMICs 中,将紧急产科服务去中心化显示出了有希望的结果,应进一步加以探索。另一方面,由于 LMIC 中缺乏区域化的证据,限制了对经验教训的推断。尽管如此,高收入国家(HICs)中某些服务(如创伤护理)成功区域化的原则可以适用于 LMIC 环境,并为服务提供和安全性创新提供基础。