撒哈拉以南非洲的重症监护,我们在哪里?回顾。

Kingsley Ufuoma Tobi, Obashina A Ogunbiyi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

撒哈拉以南非洲地区的重症监护服务尽管在 20 世纪 50 年代就已成为现代临床实践的一部分,但并没有取得多大进展。对有可能痊愈的疾病和受伤病人的管理仍无法与发达国家的循证做法相提并论,大多数病人死于许多可预防的原因。非洲的许多医院没有重症监护室,重症病人大多在普通病房接受治疗。赞比亚的一项调查显示,该国只有 7% 的医院设有重症监护室,而尼日利亚的一项横向调查显示,该国有 30 家公立和私立重症监护室,为 2 亿多人口提供服务,分布在所有地理政治区,其中大多数设在教学医院。在非洲大陆的大部分地区,情况也普遍不尽如人意。这篇综述重点探讨了撒哈拉以南非洲地区重症监护处于这种水平的原因,并就如何改变这种状况提出了建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Critical Care in Sub-Saharan Africa, Where Are We? A Review.

Critical care services in sub-Saharan Africa have not gained much grounds despite becoming part of modern clinical practice in the 1950s. Managing patients with potentially recoverable illnesses and injuries is still not at par with evidence-based practices in developed climes, and most die from many preventable causes. Many hospitals in Africa do not have an intensive care unit, leaving critically ill patients being treated mostly in the general wards. A survey from Zambia indicated that only 7% of hospitals in the country have an intensive care unit, whereas a cross-sectional survey in Nigeria revealed that there were 30 public and private intensive care units serving a population of over 200 million, spread around all the geo-political zones, with most in the teaching hospitals. The situation is not generally better in most parts of the continent. This review focuses on why critical care is at the level it is in sub-Saharan Africa and provides suggestions on what should be done to change the narrative.

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