Nekyon David O, Mung'ayi Vitalis O, Kasumba John M, Nizeyimana Francoise, Lugazia Edwin R, Harakandi Stanislas
From the Department of Anaesthesia, Aga Khan University, Nairobi, Kenya.
Department of Anaesthesia, Mulago Hospital, Kampala, Uganda.
Anesth Analg. 2025 Jan 1;140(1):129-135. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000007164. Epub 2024 Jul 25.
By 2015, 4 East African countries (Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi) had identified a deficit in the number of anesthesiologists, with a mean density of 0.30 physician anesthesia providers (PAP) per 100,000 population, which was significantly lower than the World Federation of Societies of Anaesthesiologists (WFSA) recommended minimum of 5.0/100,000 population. This workforce shortfall has been recognized as 1 factor that may negatively affect surgical outcomes. This survey sought to assess the capacity of anesthesia residency programs to meet recommended human resource standards in these countries.
This retrospective cross-sectional study surveyed heads of anesthesia departments, principals of medical colleges that host residency programs and registrars of national medical councils in 4 East African countries. A descriptive analysis of the infrastructural characteristics, human resources, cost of training, enrollment, and output from the programs over 5 years (2015-2020) was conducted. The growth in the number of registered PAP and trends in workforce density were determined. The 2020 needs deficit was calculated based on the WFSA benchmark, and the projected workforce needs in 2030 were estimated based on the population growth trajectory.
There were 7 accredited university-based anesthesia residency programs in 2020, with median (range) enrollment and graduation rates of 10.5 (2-18) and 5.5 (0-13) residents/country/year, respectively. Enrollment was unstable with some countries having years with no enrollment at all. Only 1 country had new programs planned. There was a median resident to supervisor ratio of 1.44 (0.89-7):1 and 50.3 (21.4-100)% of residency training supervisors had no academic faculty appointment. The median university tuition was $1677 (600-6165)/year. The number of PAP increased in all 4 countries median 5-year growth of 79.3 (22.7-150)%, with minimal impact on the low workforce density, median of 0.23 (0.04-0.35)/100,000 in 2020. The median deficit in PAP in 2020 was an estimated 1410 (589-2499) PAP, with a median need for 1763 (763-2911) new specialists per country by 2030.
The PAP workforce deficits significantly outstripped the annual output of all residency programs. Anesthesia societies need to raise awareness about this deficit and engage policymakers to increase investment in anesthesia training, including providing scholarships and employment of PAP in training institutions. Integrating nonuniversity-based residency programs may support an increased output. The attainability of the 2030 workforce goals will need review. National strategies are needed to increase the total anesthesia workforce, which includes nonphysician anesthesia providers (NPAPs) as part of the task-sharing framework.
到2015年,4个东非国家(肯尼亚、乌干达、卢旺达和布隆迪)已确定麻醉医师数量不足,平均密度为每10万人口有0.30名麻醉医师(PAP),这显著低于世界麻醉医师协会(WFSA)建议的每10万人口至少5.0名的标准。这种劳动力短缺已被认为是可能对手术结果产生负面影响的一个因素。这项调查旨在评估这些国家麻醉住院医师培训项目达到推荐人力资源标准的能力。
这项回顾性横断面研究对4个东非国家的麻醉科主任、开展住院医师培训项目的医学院校长以及国家医学委员会的注册官进行了调查。对2015年至2020年这5年间项目的基础设施特征、人力资源、培训成本、招生情况和产出进行了描述性分析。确定了注册PAP数量的增长以及劳动力密度趋势。根据WFSA基准计算了2020年的需求缺口,并根据人口增长轨迹估计了2030年的预计劳动力需求。
2020年有7个经认可的基于大学的麻醉住院医师培训项目,每个国家每年的招生和毕业率中位数(范围)分别为10.5(2 - 18)名和5.5(0 - 13)名住院医师。招生情况不稳定,有些国家存在完全没有招生的年份。只有1个国家计划开设新的项目。住院医师与导师的比例中位数为1.44(0.89 - 7):1,50.3%(21.4% - 100%)的住院医师培训导师没有学术教职任命。大学学费中位数为每年1677美元(600 - 6165美元)。所有4个国家的PAP数量都有所增加,5年中位数增长率为79.3%(22.7% - 150%),但对低劳动力密度的影响最小,2020年中位数为每10万人口0.23名(0.04 - 0.35名)。2020年PAP的中位数缺口估计为1410名(589 - 2499名),到2030年每个国家中位数需要1763名(763 - 2911名)新专家。
PAP劳动力短缺显著超过了所有住院医师培训项目的年产量。麻醉学会需要提高对这一短缺的认识,并促使政策制定者增加对麻醉培训的投资,包括提供奖学金以及在培训机构聘用PAP。整合非大学基础的住院医师培训项目可能有助于提高产量。2030年劳动力目标的可实现性需要重新审视。需要制定国家战略来增加麻醉劳动力总数,其中包括将非医师麻醉提供者(NPAPs)纳入任务分担框架。