发展中国家的医疗设备:可持续性和捐赠的观点。

IF 2.7 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Frontiers in health services Pub Date : 2025-09-04 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frhs.2025.1638305
Frederik Paustian, Rasmus Gøl, Hannah Wolfe Julsgart, Sofie Bjerre Degn, Andreas Philip Rosenbom, Anton Aaby Henriksen, Liselotte Højgaard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

全球南北保健基础设施的差异继续影响着中低收入国家(LMICs)医疗设备的可用性、功能和可持续性。本研究结合了系统的文献综述和乌干达医院的现场实地调查,以评估中低收入国家医疗设备的现状,并为更可持续的捐赠实践提出可操作的策略。在系统的文献回顾之后,根据五个研究问题对18篇文章进行了分析和分类,这些问题涉及可持续性指标、可负担性、回收实践、系统障碍和医疗设备使用的创新。生物医学工程志愿人员在乌干达两家医院进行的平行实地工作记录了1 400多个装置,并修复了51个项目,估计节省了102 000美元。由于缺乏备件和上下文兼容性,许多设备仍然未使用。对从丹麦运往乌干达的捐赠设备进行的碳足迹评估进一步强调了捐赠项目对环境的影响。根据文献见解和实地观察,本文提出了一套八项原则,以增强医疗设备捐赠的可持续性和长期影响。这些建议强调上下文感知设计、培训、维护和捐赠者-接受者协作,旨在将捐赠模式转变为更有弹性和更负责任的医疗保健伙伴关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Medical equipment in the global south: perspective of sustainability and donations.

Medical equipment in the global south: perspective of sustainability and donations.

Medical equipment in the global south: perspective of sustainability and donations.

Disparities in healthcare infrastructure between the Global South and North continue to affect medical equipment availability, functionality, and sustainability in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). This study combines a systematic literature review with on-site fieldwork in Ugandan hospitals to assess the current state of medical equipment in LMICs and propose actionable strategies for more sustainable donation practices. Following a systematic literature review, 18 articles were analyzed and categorized according to five research questions addressing sustainability metrics, affordability, recycling practices, systemic barriers, and innovations in medical equipment use. Parallel fieldwork conducted by biomedical engineering volunteers in two Ugandan hospitals documented over 1,400 devices and resulted in the repair of 51 items-generating estimated savings of $102,000. Many devices remained unused due to a lack of spare parts and contextual compatibility. A carbon footprint assessment of donated equipment shipment from Denmark to Uganda further underscored the environmental implications of donation programs. Drawing on literature insights and field observations, this paper proposes a set of eight principles to enhance the sustainability and long-term impact of medical equipment donations. Emphasizing context-aware design, training, maintenance, and donor-recipient collaboration, these recommendations aim to shift donation models toward more resilient and responsible healthcare partnerships.

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