S Thabit, M O'Connor, W Parker, T Mashishi, K Moodley, A Peer, K Matanzima, A J De Villiers, O Adewusi, R Aboobaker, A Rocher
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Identifying where the greatest need is can direct patient awareness initiatives, medical training and appropriate allocation of resources.</p><p><strong>Objectives: </strong>To establish the prevalence of hand pathology at regional hospitals that offer orthopaedic services in KZN, to describe the patients most commonly affected by these pathologies and to identify the most common pathologies.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>A cross-sectional investigation of hospital records and charts of patients presenting for orthopaedic care across all 10 regional hospitals in KZN that offer orthopaedic services was undertaken for 1 week's duration (June 2022). Patients were categorised into hand pathology (HP) and general orthopaedic pathology (OP) groups, which were each subdivided into trauma and non-trauma subgroups. Demographic details were collected for all patients. For HP patients, additional detail was collected regarding diagnosis, mechanism, admission and management. The prevalence of HP was calculated as a factor of all orthopaedic presentations.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>During the investigation, 2 335 patients presented to orthopaedic services. HP represented 21% of these cases. The majority (17%, 406/2 335) were related to trauma and represented 23% of all the traumatic orthopaedic presentations. Distal radius (DR) fractures were the most common hand injury (46%, 188/406) and a large proportion of trauma to the bony elements of the hand were open injuries (23%, 93/406). The remainder of HP cases comprised the non-traumatic group (4%, 91/2 335) and were predominantly infections (68%, 62/91), and many patients with non-traumatic hand pathology required surgery (60%, 55/91) and admission (56%, 52/91).</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>HP represents approximately one-fifth of all orthopaedic presentations to regional health facilities in KZN offering orthopaedic care, and close to a quarter of orthopaedic trauma occurs in the hand. Based on these findings, targeted efforts to improve community awareness of precautions against trauma to the hand, osteopaenia and hand hygiene are suggested as preventive measures. Medical training should emphasise the appropriate management of DR fractures and hand infections, and resources should be differentially allocated to the management of these debilitating HPs to decrease the burden of disease.</p>","PeriodicalId":49576,"journal":{"name":"Samj South African Medical Journal","volume":"114 8","pages":"e1246"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The prevalence of hand pathology in regional orthopaedic hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal: A cross-sectional study.\",\"authors\":\"S Thabit, M O'Connor, W Parker, T Mashishi, K Moodley, A Peer, K Matanzima, A J De Villiers, O Adewusi, R Aboobaker, A Rocher\",\"doi\":\"10.7196/SAMJ.2024.v114i8.1246\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Pathology of the hand causes functional impairment, with downstream effects for patient occupation, and consequently presents a socioeconomic burden. Investigation of the epidemiology of hand pathology in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) can help reduce the burden of disease. Identifying where the greatest need is can direct patient awareness initiatives, medical training and appropriate allocation of resources.</p><p><strong>Objectives: </strong>To establish the prevalence of hand pathology at regional hospitals that offer orthopaedic services in KZN, to describe the patients most commonly affected by these pathologies and to identify the most common pathologies.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>A cross-sectional investigation of hospital records and charts of patients presenting for orthopaedic care across all 10 regional hospitals in KZN that offer orthopaedic services was undertaken for 1 week's duration (June 2022). Patients were categorised into hand pathology (HP) and general orthopaedic pathology (OP) groups, which were each subdivided into trauma and non-trauma subgroups. Demographic details were collected for all patients. 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The remainder of HP cases comprised the non-traumatic group (4%, 91/2 335) and were predominantly infections (68%, 62/91), and many patients with non-traumatic hand pathology required surgery (60%, 55/91) and admission (56%, 52/91).</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>HP represents approximately one-fifth of all orthopaedic presentations to regional health facilities in KZN offering orthopaedic care, and close to a quarter of orthopaedic trauma occurs in the hand. Based on these findings, targeted efforts to improve community awareness of precautions against trauma to the hand, osteopaenia and hand hygiene are suggested as preventive measures. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:手部病变会导致功能障碍,并对患者的职业产生下游影响,从而造成社会经济负担。对夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省(KZN)手部病理学流行病学的调查有助于减轻疾病负担。确定需求最大的地区可以指导提高患者意识的举措、医疗培训和适当的资源分配:目的:在克赞纳塔尔提供骨科服务的地区医院中确定手部病变的发病率,描述最常受这些病变影响的患者,并确定最常见的病变:对克州所有10家提供骨科服务的地区医院的骨科病人的医院记录和病历进行了为期一周(2022年6月)的横向调查。患者被分为手部病理(HP)组和普通骨科病理(OP)组,每组又分为创伤和非创伤亚组。收集了所有患者的详细人口统计学资料。对于 HP 患者,还收集了有关诊断、发病机制、入院和治疗的其他详细信息。根据所有骨科病例的系数计算出 HP 的发病率:调查期间,共有 2 335 名患者到骨科就诊。HP占这些病例的21%。大多数病例(17%,406/2 335)与创伤有关,占所有创伤骨科病例的 23%。桡骨远端(DR)骨折是最常见的手部损伤(46%,188/406),大部分手部骨骼创伤为开放性损伤(23%,93/406)。其余的手外伤病例为非创伤性病例(4%,91/2 335),主要是感染(68%,62/91),许多非创伤性手部病变患者需要手术(60%,55/91)和住院治疗(56%,52/91):结论:在克州提供骨科治疗的地区医疗机构中,手部创伤约占所有骨科就诊病例的五分之一,近四分之一的骨科创伤发生在手部。基于这些发现,建议采取有针对性的预防措施,提高社区对手部创伤、骨质疏松症和手部卫生的防范意识。医疗培训应强调对DR骨折和手部感染的适当处理,并应为处理这些使人衰弱的HP分配不同的资源,以减轻疾病负担。
The prevalence of hand pathology in regional orthopaedic hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal: A cross-sectional study.
Background: Pathology of the hand causes functional impairment, with downstream effects for patient occupation, and consequently presents a socioeconomic burden. Investigation of the epidemiology of hand pathology in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) can help reduce the burden of disease. Identifying where the greatest need is can direct patient awareness initiatives, medical training and appropriate allocation of resources.
Objectives: To establish the prevalence of hand pathology at regional hospitals that offer orthopaedic services in KZN, to describe the patients most commonly affected by these pathologies and to identify the most common pathologies.
Methods: A cross-sectional investigation of hospital records and charts of patients presenting for orthopaedic care across all 10 regional hospitals in KZN that offer orthopaedic services was undertaken for 1 week's duration (June 2022). Patients were categorised into hand pathology (HP) and general orthopaedic pathology (OP) groups, which were each subdivided into trauma and non-trauma subgroups. Demographic details were collected for all patients. For HP patients, additional detail was collected regarding diagnosis, mechanism, admission and management. The prevalence of HP was calculated as a factor of all orthopaedic presentations.
Results: During the investigation, 2 335 patients presented to orthopaedic services. HP represented 21% of these cases. The majority (17%, 406/2 335) were related to trauma and represented 23% of all the traumatic orthopaedic presentations. Distal radius (DR) fractures were the most common hand injury (46%, 188/406) and a large proportion of trauma to the bony elements of the hand were open injuries (23%, 93/406). The remainder of HP cases comprised the non-traumatic group (4%, 91/2 335) and were predominantly infections (68%, 62/91), and many patients with non-traumatic hand pathology required surgery (60%, 55/91) and admission (56%, 52/91).
Conclusion: HP represents approximately one-fifth of all orthopaedic presentations to regional health facilities in KZN offering orthopaedic care, and close to a quarter of orthopaedic trauma occurs in the hand. Based on these findings, targeted efforts to improve community awareness of precautions against trauma to the hand, osteopaenia and hand hygiene are suggested as preventive measures. Medical training should emphasise the appropriate management of DR fractures and hand infections, and resources should be differentially allocated to the management of these debilitating HPs to decrease the burden of disease.
期刊介绍:
The SAMJ is a monthly peer reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal. It carries The SAMJ is a monthly, peer-reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal publishing leading research impacting clinical care in Africa. The Journal is not limited to articles that have ‘general medical content’, but is intending to capture the spectrum of medical and health sciences, grouped by relevance to the country’s burden of disease. This will include research in the social sciences and economics that is relevant to the medical issues around our burden of disease
The journal carries research articles and letters, editorials, clinical practice and other medical articles and personal opinion, South African health-related news, obituaries, general correspondence, and classified advertisements (refer to the section policies for further information).