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为实现全民健康覆盖而更好地建设儿童外科服务:来自孟加拉国和津巴布韦的观点。

Building back better children's surgical services toward universal health coverage: Perspectives from Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.

机构信息

Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.

Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences, Medical Sciences Division, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.

出版信息

Front Public Health. 2023 Jan 25;11:1073319. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1073319. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

This article is part of the Research Topic 'Health Systems Recovery in the Context of COVID-19 and Protracted Conflict'. Children's surgical services are crucial, yet underappreciated, for children's health and must be sufficiently addressed to make and sustain progress toward universal health coverage (UHC). Despite their considerable burden and socioeconomic cost, surgical diseases have been relatively neglected in favor of communicable diseases living up to their inauspicious moniker: 'the neglected stepchild of global health'. This article aims to raise awareness around children's surgical diseases and offers perspectives from two prototypical LMICs on strengthening surgical services in the context of health systems recovery following the COVID-19 experience to make and sustain progress toward UHC.

APPROACH

We used a focused literature review supplemented by the perspectives of local experts and the 6-components framework for surgical systems planning to present two case studies of Bangladesh and Zimbabwe. The lived experiences of the authors are used to describe the impact of COVID-19 on respective surgical systems and offer perspectives on building back the health system and recovering essential health services for sustainability and resilience.

FINDINGS

We found that limited high-level policy and planning instruments, an overburdened and under-resourced health and allied workforce, underdeveloped surgical infrastructure (from key utilities to essential medical products), lack of locally generated research, and the specter of prohibitively high out-of-pocket costs for children's surgery are common challenges in both countries that have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

DISCUSSION

Continued chronic underinvestment and inattention to children's surgical diseases coupled with the devastating effect of the COVID-19 pandemic threaten progress toward key global health objectives. Urgent attention and investment in the context of health systems recovery is needed from policy to practice levels to improve infrastructure; attract, retain and train the surgical and allied health workforce; and improve service delivery access with equity considerations to meet the 2030 Lancet Commission goals, and make and sustain progress toward UHC and the SDGs.

摘要

简介

本文是“COVID-19 和长期冲突背景下的卫生系统恢复”研究专题的一部分。儿童外科服务对儿童健康至关重要,但却未得到充分重视,必须充分解决这一问题,以实现全民健康覆盖(UHC)并持续取得进展。尽管外科疾病带来了巨大的负担和社会经济成本,但相对于传染病而言,它们一直被忽视,这也符合它们不幸的绰号:“全球卫生被忽视的弃儿”。本文旨在提高人们对儿童外科疾病的认识,并从两个典型的中低收入国家的角度出发,在 COVID-19 疫情后卫生系统恢复的背景下,就加强外科服务提供观点,以实现并持续推进全民健康覆盖和可持续发展目标。

方法

我们使用了重点文献回顾,并辅以当地专家的观点和外科系统规划的 6 个组成部分框架,介绍了孟加拉国和津巴布韦的两个案例研究。作者的亲身经历用于描述 COVID-19 对各自外科系统的影响,并就建立卫生系统和恢复基本卫生服务以实现可持续性和弹性提供观点。

发现

我们发现,两国都面临着一些共同的挑战,包括有限的高级别政策和规划工具、负担过重且资源不足的卫生和相关卫生工作队伍、欠发达的外科基础设施(从关键设施到基本医疗产品)、缺乏本地产生的研究以及儿童手术费用过高的问题,这些问题在 COVID-19 大流行期间进一步恶化。

讨论

持续的慢性投资不足和对儿童外科疾病的关注不足,加上 COVID-19 大流行的毁灭性影响,威胁着实现全球卫生目标的进展。需要从政策到实践层面,在卫生系统恢复的背景下,紧急关注和投资,以改善基础设施;吸引、留住和培训外科和相关卫生工作队伍;并改善服务提供的可及性,兼顾公平,以实现 2030 年 Lancet 委员会的目标,并实现全民健康覆盖和可持续发展目标的可持续进展。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/1591/9906807/5d24f2d76d5b/fpubh-11-1073319-g0001.jpg

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