全球病理学:问题、进展和潜力掠影》。

Andria Chada, Aisha Jibril Suleiman, Zewditu Chanyalew, Lewis Hassell, Bereket Berhane Woldeab, Giorgis Yeabo, Dana Razzano
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景为了实现公平的全球医疗保健,联合国为低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)的医疗保健制定了可持续发展目标,目标是到 2030 年实现全民医疗保健。目前,全球 47% 的人口无法获得许多常见疾病的基本诊断。由于非传染性疾病在低收入和中等收入国家急剧增加,对诊断服务的需求从未像现在这样迫切。柳叶刀诊断委员会在最近的一项分析中估计,如果仅将 6 种重点疾病的诊断差距缩小到 10%,每年就可避免 110 万人死亡:数据来源:对全球病理学领域的多位专家进行了访谈:除了在美国以外的低资源环境中工作的病理学家外,还采访了几位全球病理学专家。对已发表的有关全球病理学工作主题的文献进行了分析和总结,从而为全球病理学的现状提供了一个具有凝聚力的缩影:结论:努力提高低资源环境中诊断的可及性将挽救数百万人的生命。要解决目前全球病理学服务不足的问题,需要整个病理学和实验室医学界做出全球性承诺,需要政府的支持,也需要公私部门的合作,以实现公平的医疗保健。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Global Pathology: A Snapshot of the Problems, the Progress, and the Potential.

Context.—: For equitable global health care, the United Nations has outlined Sustainable Development Goals for health in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) with the goal of reaching universal health care by 2030. Currently, 47% of the global population lacks access to basic diagnostics for many common diseases. The need for diagnostic access has never been more critical owing to the dramatic rise of noncommunicable diseases in LMICS. In a recent analysis, The Lancet Commission on Diagnostics estimated that 1.1 million deaths occurring on an annual basis could be avoided if the diagnostic gap were reduced to 10% for only 6 priority conditions.

Objective.—: To provide a nonexhaustive summary of the progress made to overcome the barriers to adequate access and explore the potential solutions needed to achieve global diagnostic equity.

Data sources.—: Several experts in global pathology were interviewed in addition to pathologists working in low-resource settings outside of the United States. Published literature on the topic of global pathology work was analyzed and summarized to provide a cohesive snapshot of the status of global pathology.

Conclusions.—: Working to increase access to diagnostics in low-resource settings will save millions of lives. The solution to the current inadequate availability of global pathology services will require a global commitment from the entire pathology and laboratory medicine community, government support, and collaboration between the public-private sectors to achieve equitable health care.

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