Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Public Health, Baylor University, Waco, Texas, USA.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jun 16;11(6):e045981. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-045981.
This study evaluates the priority given to surgical care for children within national health policies, strategies and plans (NHPSPs).
We reviewed the NHPSPs available in the WHO's Country Planning Cycle Database. Countries with NHPSPs in languages different from English, Spanish, French or Chinese were excluded. A total of 124 countries met the inclusion criteria.
We searched for child-specific and surgery-specific terms in the NHPSPs' missions, goals and strategies using three analytic approaches: (1) count of the total number of mentions, (2) count of the number of policies with no mentions and (3) count of the number of policies with five or more mentions. Outcomes were compared across WHO regional and World Bank income-level classifications.
We found that the most frequently mentioned terms were 'child*', 'infant*' and 'immuniz*'. The most frequently mentioned surgery term was 'surg*'. Overall, 45% of NHPSPs discussed surgery and 7% discussed children's surgery. The majority (93%) of countries did not mention selected essential and cost-effective children's procedures. When stratified by WHO region and World Bank income level, the West Pacific region led the inclusion of 'pediatric surgery' in national health plans, with 17% of its countries mentioning this term. Likewise, low-income countries led the inclusion of surg* and 'pediatric surgery', with 63% and 11% of countries mentioning these terms, respectively. In both stratifications, paediatric surgery only equated to less than 1% of the total terms.
The low prevalence of children's surgical search terms in NHPSPs indicates that the influence of surgical care for this population remains low in the majority of countries. Increased awareness of children's surgical needs in national health plans might constitute a critical step to scale up surgical system in these countries.
本研究评估了国家卫生政策、战略和计划(NHPSP)中对儿童外科护理的重视程度。
我们查阅了世卫组织国家规划周期数据库中提供的 NHPSP。排除了 NHPSP 为英语、西班牙语、法语或中文以外语言的国家。共有 124 个国家符合纳入标准。
我们使用三种分析方法在 NHPSP 的使命、目标和战略中搜索儿童和手术特定术语:(1)提及总数,(2)无提及政策数量,(3)提及 5 次或更多次政策数量。结果按世卫组织区域和世界银行收入水平分类进行比较。
我们发现最常提到的术语是“child*”、“infant*”和“immuniz*”。最常提到的手术术语是“surg*”。总体而言,45%的 NHPSP 讨论了手术,7%讨论了儿童手术。大多数(93%)国家未提及选定的基本和具有成本效益的儿童程序。按世卫组织区域和世界银行收入水平分层,西太平洋地区在国家卫生计划中纳入“小儿外科”的比例最高,其国家中有 17%提到了这一术语。同样,低收入国家在纳入 surg*和“小儿外科”方面处于领先地位,分别有 63%和 11%的国家提到了这两个术语。在这两种分层中,小儿外科仅占总术语的不到 1%。
NHPSP 中儿童外科搜索词的低流行率表明,在大多数国家,外科护理对这一人群的影响仍然较低。提高对国家卫生计划中儿童外科需求的认识可能是这些国家扩大外科系统的关键步骤。