支持矫形外科外展能力建设的临床实践指南:建立国际共识的方法。

IF 4.4 1区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Jessica M Welch, Robin N Kamal, Scott H Kozin, George S M Dyer, Julia A Katarincic, Paige M Fox, Lauren M Shapiro
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:高收入国家的医疗机构向低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)开展外科外展活动的数量正在增加,以帮助应对需要进行外科手术的疾病日益增加的负担。然而,人们仍对此类外展活动的影响和可持续性表示担忧。主要组织(如世界卫生组织)主张采用能力建设的方法来确保当地医疗系统的安全、质量和可持续性。尽管如此,据我们所知,目前还没有任何指南来指导此类工作。我们的目标是制定临床实践指南(CPG),利用多方利益相关者和国际投票小组支持骨科手术外展的能力建设:我们采用了经过修改的美国矫形外科医师学会 (AAOS) CPG 开发流程。我们在 7 个预定义的能力建设领域(伙伴关系、专业发展、管理、社区影响、财务、协调和文化)内系统地查阅了现有文献。由 6 名在外科外展方面具有丰富经验的骨科医生组成的写作小组对现有文献进行了审查,并针对每个领域制定了基于共识的 CPG。我们成立了一个由骨科外科医生和管理人员组成的国际投票小组,他们在外联组织或与外联组织合作的医院中担任领导职务。成员们逐一审查了 CPG,并投票决定是否批准每项指南。如果有超过 80% 的小组成员投票赞成,则认为该 CPG 已获批准:由来自 6 个国家的 14 名外科医生和管理人员组成的国际投票小组批准了所有 7 项 CPG。每份国家方案指导文件都对特定领域的能力建设提出了建议。例如,在合作伙伴关系领域,CPG 建议为外联组织和当地团队之间持续的双向合作伙伴关系制定有据可查的计划。在专业发展方面,CPG 建议开发以需求为基础的课程,重点关注手术和非手术患者护理,并利用说教和实践技术:结论:随着骨科手术外展活动的增加,为能力建设活动提供信息的最佳实践 CPG 有助于确保资源和工作得到优化,以支持当地医疗点持续提供医疗服务。随着支持低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)能力建设的证据不断发展,这些指南可在未来进行审查和更新。需要进行外科手术的疾病给全球造成了沉重负担,而在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),原本可以治疗的疾病的发病率和死亡率仍然过高1,2。据估计,如果将死亡率降低到高收入国家(HICs)的水平,每年可避免多达 200 万例(约 40%)中低收入国家(LMICs)与伤害相关的死亡3。 尽管如此,资源匮乏地区在改善安全、及时手术的可及性方面却进展缓慢。从历史上看,非政府组织(NGOs)曾试图通过短期外展旅行来满足未得到满足的手术需求;然而,越来越多的批评强调了短期旅行的局限性,包括有限的后续行动、增加当地劳动力的负担以及进一步消耗当地资源4-6。鉴于持续存在的问题,公共卫生的重点已转向强调长期能力建设而非短期医疗服务的模式。能力建设是一种医疗保健发展方法,它通过发展基础设施、可持续性和加强问题解决来建立独立性,同时考虑到具体情况7,8。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Clinical Practice Guidelines to Support Capacity Building in Orthopaedic Surgical Outreach: An International Consensus Building Approach.

Background: Surgical outreach to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) by organizations from high- income countries is on the rise to help address the growing burden of conditions warranting surgery. However, concerns remain about the impact and sustainability of such outreach. Leading organizations (e.g., the World Health Organization) advocate for a capacity-building approach to ensure the safety, quality, and sustainability of the local health-care system. Despite this, to our knowledge, no guidelines exist to inform such efforts. We aimed to develop clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) to support capacity-building in orthopaedic surgical outreach utilizing a multistakeholder and international voting panel.

Methods: We followed a modified American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) CPG development process. We systematically reviewed the existing literature across 7 predefined capacity-building domains (partnership, professional development, governance, community impact, finance, coordination, and culture). A writing panel composed of 6 orthopaedic surgeons with extensive experience in surgical outreach reviewed the existing literature and developed a consensus-based CPG for each domain. We created an international voting panel of orthopaedic surgeons and administrators who have leadership roles in outreach organizations or hospitals with which outreach organizations partner. Members individually reviewed the CPGs and voted to approve or disapprove each guideline. A CPG was considered approved if >80% of panel members voted to approve it.

Results: An international voting panel of 14 surgeons and administrators from 6 countries approved all 7 of the CPGs. Each CPG provides recommendations for capacity-building in a specific domain. For example, in the domain of partnership, the CPG recommends the development of a documented plan for ongoing, bidirectional partnership between the outreach organization and the local team. In the domain of professional development, the CPG recommends the development of a needs-based curriculum focused on both surgical and nonsurgical patient care utilizing didactic and hands-on techniques.

Conclusions: As orthopaedic surgical outreach grows, best-practice CPGs to inform capacity-building initiatives can help to ensure that resources and efforts are optimized to support the sustainability of care delivery at local sites. These guidelines can be reviewed and updated in the future as evidence that supports capacity-building in LMICs evolves.The global burden of disease warranting surgery is substantial, and morbidity and mortality from otherwise treatable conditions remain disproportionately high in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) 1 , 2 . It is estimated that up to 2 million (about 40%) of injury-related deaths in LMICs could be avoided annually if mortality rates were reduced to the level of those in high-income countries (HICs) 3 . Despite this, progress toward improved access to safe, timely surgery in resource-poor areas has been slow. Historically, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) have tried to address unmet surgical needs through short-term outreach trips; however, growing criticism has highlighted the limitations of short-term trips, including limited follow-up, an increased burden on the local workforce, and further depletion of local resources 4-6 . In light of ongoing concerns, public health priorities have shifted toward models that emphasize long-term capacity-building rather than short-term care delivery. Capacity-building is an approach to health-care development that builds independence through infrastructure development, sustainability, and enhanced problem-solving while taking context into account 7 , 8 .

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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
7.50%
发文量
660
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery (JBJS) has been the most valued source of information for orthopaedic surgeons and researchers for over 125 years and is the gold standard in peer-reviewed scientific information in the field. A core journal and essential reading for general as well as specialist orthopaedic surgeons worldwide, The Journal publishes evidence-based research to enhance the quality of care for orthopaedic patients. Standards of excellence and high quality are maintained in everything we do, from the science of the content published to the customer service we provide. JBJS is an independent, non-profit journal.
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