College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria; Research Department, Association of Future African Neurosurgeons, Yaounde, Cameroon.
Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2022 Oct;166:e388-e403. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2022.07.021. Epub 2022 Jul 12.
Africa has an increased burden of neurosurgical diseases with an estimate of 1,986,392 neurosurgical cases, 108,824 neurosurgical case capacity, and 1,877,568 case deficits yearly. Literature suggests that about 8420 neurosurgeons are needed to fill this vast gap. The main objective of this study is to elucidate barriers encountered in pursuing neurosurgery training in the African context.
A cross-sectional electronic survey, developed in English and subsequently translated into French, was utilized. This was disseminated among medical students, medical interns, and junior doctors in all 5 African regions.
A total of 491 responses were received from the following 5 African regions: West Africa (30.5%), East Africa (30.3%), Central Africa (18.1%), North Africa (11.8%), and Southern Africa (9.2%). Of the participants, 55.2% were men and 44.8% were women. Seventy-six percent of respondents were aware of the neurosurgery deficit in Africa. Barriers to pursuing neurosurgery included discouragement from others over lack of an "ideal personality" trait, culture/cultural beliefs as related to gender roles, lack of mentorship, inadequate neurosurgical training opportunities, poor health infrastructure for neurosurgical practice in Africa, poor patient outcomes, and challenges with work/life balance were some of the barriers highlighted to pursuing neurosurgical career on the continent.
Even with its robust population growth, Africa is not producing enough neurosurgeons to meet the demands of the population due to several barriers. Delineating these challenges and barriers represents an important step in developing sustainable mechanisms for recruitment, training, mentorship, and support of burgeoning African neurosurgeons.
非洲神经外科学疾病负担加重,估计每年有 1986392 例神经外科学病例、108824 例神经外科学病例容量和 1877568 例病例不足。文献表明,需要大约 8420 名神经外科医生来填补这一巨大空白。本研究的主要目的是阐明在非洲背景下从事神经外科培训所遇到的障碍。
采用横断面电子调查,以英语编写,随后翻译成法语。该调查在非洲五个地区的医学生、实习医生和初级医生中进行。
共收到来自非洲五个地区的 491 份回复:西非(30.5%)、东非(30.3%)、中非(18.1%)、北非(11.8%)和南部非洲(9.2%)。参与者中,55.2%为男性,44.8%为女性。76%的受访者意识到非洲神经外科的不足。从事神经外科的障碍包括因缺乏“理想人格”特质而受到他人的劝阻、与性别角色相关的文化/文化信仰、缺乏指导、神经外科培训机会不足、非洲神经外科实践的卫生基础设施差、患者预后不良以及工作/生活平衡方面的挑战等。
尽管非洲人口增长强劲,但由于多种障碍,非洲培养的神经外科医生数量不足以满足人口需求。阐明这些挑战和障碍是制定可持续的招聘、培训、指导和支持非洲新兴神经外科医生的机制的重要一步。