Department of Surgery, Maputo Central Hospital, Eduardo Mondlane University, Maputo, Mozambique.
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Ave, New York, NY, 10065, USA.
World J Surg. 2021 May;45(5):1306-1315. doi: 10.1007/s00268-020-05925-0. Epub 2021 Jan 31.
Surgery plays a critical role in sustainable healthcare systems. Validated metrics exist to guide implementation of surgical services, but low-income countries (LIC) struggle to report recommended metrics and this poses a critical barrier to addressing unmet need. We present a comprehensive national sample of surgical encounters from a LIC by assessing the National Health Services of Mozambique.
A prospective cohort of all surgical encounters from Mozambique's National Health Service was gathered for all provinces between July and December 2015. Primary outcomes were timely access, provider densities for surgery, anesthesiology, and obstetrics (SAO) per 100,000 population, annualized surgical procedure volume per 100,000, and postoperative mortality (POMR). Secondary outcomes include operating room density and efficiency.
Fifty-four hospitals had surgical capacity in 11 provinces with 47,189 surgeries. 44.9% of Mozambique's population lives in Districts without access to surgical services. National SAO density was 1.2/100,000, ranging from 0.4/100,000 in Manica Province to 9.8/100,000 in Maputo City. Annualized national surgical case volume was 367 procedures/100,000 population, ranging from 180/100,000 in Zambezia Province to 1,897/100,000 in Maputo City. National POMR was 0.74% and ranged from 0.23% in Maputo Province to 1.78% in Niassa Province.
Surgical delivery in Mozambique falls short of international targets. Subnational deficiencies and variations between provinces pose targets for quality improvement in advancing national surgical plans. This serves as a template for LICs to follow in gathering surgical metrics for the WHO and the World Bank and offers short- and long-term targets for surgery as a component of health systems strengthening.
手术在可持续医疗体系中起着至关重要的作用。现已有验证有效的指标来指导手术服务的实施,但低收入国家(LIC)在报告推荐指标方面存在困难,这对解决未满足的需求构成了重大障碍。我们通过评估莫桑比克国家卫生服务,展示了来自 LIC 的全面的国家手术样本。
2015 年 7 月至 12 月期间,对莫桑比克全国卫生服务系统的所有手术进行了前瞻性队列研究,涵盖所有省份。主要结果是及时获得手术、每 10 万人中外科医生、麻醉师和妇产科医生密度(SAO)、每 10 万人年化手术量和术后死亡率(POMR)。次要结果包括手术室密度和效率。
11 个省的 54 家医院具备手术能力,共进行了 47,189 例手术。44.9%的莫桑比克人口生活在无法获得手术服务的地区。全国 SAO 密度为 1.2/100,000,从马普托市的 9.8/100,000到马尼卡省的 0.4/100,000 不等。全国年化手术量为 367 例/100,000 人,从赞比西亚省的 180/100,000 到马普托市的 1,897/100,000 不等。全国 POMR 为 0.74%,从马普托省的 0.23%到尼亚萨省的 1.78%不等。
莫桑比克的手术服务达不到国际标准。各省之间存在的省内缺陷和差异,为推进国家手术计划的质量改进提出了目标。这为 LIC 提供了一个模板,用于为世卫组织和世界银行收集手术指标,并为手术作为卫生系统加强的一个组成部分提供了短期和长期目标。