Assessing Ethiopia's surgical capacity in light of global surgery 2030 initiatives: Is there progress in the past decade?

IF 1.4 Q3 SURGERY
Cherinet Osebo PhD , Jeremy Grushka MD , Dan Deckelbaum MD , Tarek Razek MD
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Abstract

Background

Surgical, anesthetic, and obstetric (SAO) care plays a crucial role in global health, recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO) and The Lancet Commission on Global Surgery (LCoGS). LCoGS outlines six indicators for integrating SAO services into a country's healthcare system through National Surgical Obstetrics and Anesthesia Plans (NSOAPs). In Ethiopia, surgical services progress lacks evaluation. This study assesses current Ethiopian surgical capacity using the LCoGS NSOAPs framework.

Methods

We conducted a narrative review of published literature on critical LCoGS NSAOPs metrics to extract information on key domains; service delivery, workforce, infrastructure, finance, and information management.

Results

Ethiopia's surgical services face challenges, including a low surgical volume (43) and a scarcity of specialist SOA physicians (0.5) per 100,000 population. Over half of Ethiopians reside outside the 2-hour radius of surgery-ready hospitals, and 98 % face surgery-related impoverished expenditures. Lacking the LCoGS-recommended SOA reporting systems, approximately 44 % of facilities exist for handling bellwether procedures. Despite the prevalence of essential surgeries, primary district hospitals have limited operative infrastructures, resulting in disparities in the surgical landscape. Most surgery-ready facilities are concentrated in cities, leaving Ethiopia's 80 % rural population with inadequate access to surgical care.

Conclusion

Ethiopia's surgical capacity falls below LCoGS NSOAPs recommendations, with challenges in infrastructure, personnel, and data retrieval. Critical measures include scaling up access, workforce, public insurance, and information management to enhance SAO services. Ethiopia pioneered in Sub-Saharan Africa by establishing Saving Lives Through Safe Surgery (SaLTS) in response to NSOAPs, but progress lags behind LCoGS recommendations.

根据全球外科 2030 倡议评估埃塞俄比亚的外科能力:过去十年是否取得了进展?
背景世界卫生组织(WHO)和柳叶刀全球外科委员会(LCoGS)认为,外科、麻醉和产科(SAO)护理在全球健康中发挥着至关重要的作用。LCoGS 概述了通过国家产科手术和麻醉计划 (NSOAP) 将 SAO 服务纳入国家医疗保健系统的六项指标。在埃塞俄比亚,外科服务的进展缺乏评估。本研究使用 LCoGS NSOAPs 框架评估了埃塞俄比亚目前的手术能力。方法我们对已发表的有关 LCoGS NSAOPs 关键指标的文献进行了叙述性综述,以提取关键领域的信息;服务提供、劳动力、基础设施、财务和信息管理。结果埃塞俄比亚的手术服务面临挑战,包括手术量低(43 例)和每 10 万人口中缺乏专业的 SOA 医生(0.5 名)。超过一半的埃塞俄比亚人居住在可提供手术的医院 2 小时半径范围之外,98% 的人面临与手术相关的贫困支出。由于缺乏 LCoGS 推荐的 SOA 报告系统,约有 44% 的设施可用于处理 "风向标 "手术。尽管基本外科手术普遍存在,但基层地区医院的手术基础设施有限,导致外科手术情况参差不齐。结论埃塞俄比亚的手术能力低于 LCoGS NSOAPs 的建议,在基础设施、人员和数据检索方面存在挑战。关键措施包括扩大就医渠道、增加劳动力、加强公共保险和信息管理,以加强 SAO 服务。埃塞俄比亚率先在撒哈拉以南非洲建立了 "通过安全手术挽救生命"(SaLTS),以响应 NSOAPs 的要求,但进展落后于 LCoGS 的建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
66 days
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