Department of Pediatric Surgery, John R. Oishei Children's Hospital, 1001 Main Street, Buffalo, NY, 14203, USA.
Department of Surgery, Maine Medical Center, Portland, ME, USA.
World J Surg. 2020 Nov;44(11):3620-3628. doi: 10.1007/s00268-020-05680-2.
Despite recent attention to the provision of healthcare in low- and middle-income countries, improvements in access to surgical services have been disproportionately lagging.
This study analyzes the geographic variability in access to pediatric surgical services in the province of North Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). On-site data collection was conducted using the Global Assessment of Pediatric Surgery tool. Spatial distribution of providers was mapped using the Geographical Information System and open-sourced spatial data to determine distances traveled to access surgical care.
Forty facilities were evaluated across 32 health zones; 68.9% of the provincial population was within 15 km of these facilities. Eleven facilities met a minimum World Health Organization safety score of 8; 48.1% of the population was within 15 km of corresponding facilities. The majority of children were treated by someone with specific pediatric surgery training in only 4 facilities; one facility had a trained pediatric anesthesia provider. Fifty-seven percent of the population was within 15 km of a facility with critical care and emergency medicine (EM) capabilities. There was one pediatric critical care provider and no pediatric EM providers identified within the province. Location-allocation assessment is needed to combine geographic area with potential for greatest impact and facility assessment.
Limitations in access to surgical care in the DRC are multifactorial with poor resources, few formally trained surgical providers, and near-absent access to pediatric anesthesiologists. The study highlights the deficits in the capacity for surgical care while demonstrating a reproducible model for assessment and identification of ways to improve access to care.
尽管最近关注了中低收入国家的医疗保健服务提供情况,但获得外科服务的改善程度却不成比例地滞后。
本研究分析了刚果民主共和国(DRC)北基伍省获得儿科外科服务的地理差异。现场数据收集使用全球儿科手术评估工具进行。使用地理信息系统和开源空间数据对提供者的空间分布进行了映射,以确定到达外科护理地点的距离。
在 32 个卫生区评估了 40 个设施;该省 68.9%的人口在这些设施的 15 公里范围内。有 11 个设施达到了世界卫生组织最低安全评分 8 分;48.1%的人口在相应设施的 15 公里范围内。只有 4 家医疗机构的大部分儿童由具有特定儿科手术培训的人员治疗;一家机构有经过培训的儿科麻醉师。57%的人口在有重症监护和急诊医学(EM)能力的设施 15 公里范围内。该省只有一名儿科重症监护提供者,没有发现儿科 EM 提供者。需要进行位置分配评估,将地理区域与最大影响潜力和设施评估相结合。
DRC 获得外科护理的机会受到多种因素的限制,包括资源匮乏、很少有经过正式培训的外科提供者以及几乎无法获得儿科麻醉师。该研究强调了外科护理能力的不足,同时展示了一种可复制的评估和确定改善护理机会的方法。