Increasing Access to Surgical Services in Sub-Saharan Africa
|
By HospiMedica International staff writers Posted on 06 Jan 2010 |
A policy paper by an international team of 42 experts lays out four recommendations on how to improve access to surgical services in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The Bellagio Essential Surgery Group (BESG) is a network of surgeons, anesthesiologists, public health professionals, economists, and policy makers committed to raising international awareness and increase access to surgical services in resource constrained settings in sub-Saharan Africa. In their policy paper, BESG make four key recommendations:
1. Strengthen surgical services at district hospitals; the presence of such units would help ensure a functioning blood bank, a clinical laboratory, and the emergency transport and communication systems of a hospital, and thus improve its overall effectiveness.
2. Improve systems for the delivery of trauma care. The components that need to be addressed include improvements in prehospital care, patient management, strengthening of care at clinics and hospitals, streamlining of the referral process, instituting financing mechanisms to remove financial barriers to care, and ensuring adequate data with which to monitor the quality of care provided.
3. Expand the supply and quality of health workers with surgical skills, and establish mechanisms for accreditation and coordination of the training programs within and across countries, and to conduct objective evaluations of their outcomes.
4. Build evidence for creating informed interventions, as there is little evidence to answer even basic questions about the prevalence and incidence of surgical conditions and the provision of surgical interventions in sub-Saharan Africa.
Further plans include collecting additional evidence about the incidence and prevalence of surgical conditions, the gap in service provision, advocacy and dissemination, and establishing demonstration project developments to improve access to surgical services, particularly at the district hospital level in the region. The policy paper was published in the December 2009 issue of PLos Medicine.
"We call on surgeons, public health researchers, health economists, epidemiologists, and social scientists to collaborate to determine research priorities, institute training in appropriate research methods, encourage funders to support surgical research projects and undertake such work together,” exhorted the group of experts. "Lastly, we also call on surgeons, through their regional and national professional associations, to look beyond the walls of their operating theatres to involve themselves in advocacy, training, research, and health service management.”
Sub-Saharan Africa suffers the world's highest burden of conditions and diseases that require surgical treatment. This burden is mainly due to injuries, obstetric complications cancer, neonatal conditions, congenital anomalies, cataracts, and glaucoma. For example, in 2005, over 250,000 women died from complications of childbirth. Most of these deaths could have been avoided by providing women with access to basic obstetric care and obstetric surgical care.
Related Links:
Bellagio Essential Surgery Group
The Bellagio Essential Surgery Group (BESG) is a network of surgeons, anesthesiologists, public health professionals, economists, and policy makers committed to raising international awareness and increase access to surgical services in resource constrained settings in sub-Saharan Africa. In their policy paper, BESG make four key recommendations:
1. Strengthen surgical services at district hospitals; the presence of such units would help ensure a functioning blood bank, a clinical laboratory, and the emergency transport and communication systems of a hospital, and thus improve its overall effectiveness.
2. Improve systems for the delivery of trauma care. The components that need to be addressed include improvements in prehospital care, patient management, strengthening of care at clinics and hospitals, streamlining of the referral process, instituting financing mechanisms to remove financial barriers to care, and ensuring adequate data with which to monitor the quality of care provided.
3. Expand the supply and quality of health workers with surgical skills, and establish mechanisms for accreditation and coordination of the training programs within and across countries, and to conduct objective evaluations of their outcomes.
4. Build evidence for creating informed interventions, as there is little evidence to answer even basic questions about the prevalence and incidence of surgical conditions and the provision of surgical interventions in sub-Saharan Africa.
Further plans include collecting additional evidence about the incidence and prevalence of surgical conditions, the gap in service provision, advocacy and dissemination, and establishing demonstration project developments to improve access to surgical services, particularly at the district hospital level in the region. The policy paper was published in the December 2009 issue of PLos Medicine.
"We call on surgeons, public health researchers, health economists, epidemiologists, and social scientists to collaborate to determine research priorities, institute training in appropriate research methods, encourage funders to support surgical research projects and undertake such work together,” exhorted the group of experts. "Lastly, we also call on surgeons, through their regional and national professional associations, to look beyond the walls of their operating theatres to involve themselves in advocacy, training, research, and health service management.”
Sub-Saharan Africa suffers the world's highest burden of conditions and diseases that require surgical treatment. This burden is mainly due to injuries, obstetric complications cancer, neonatal conditions, congenital anomalies, cataracts, and glaucoma. For example, in 2005, over 250,000 women died from complications of childbirth. Most of these deaths could have been avoided by providing women with access to basic obstetric care and obstetric surgical care.
Related Links:
Bellagio Essential Surgery Group
Latest Surgical Techniques News
- 3D Map of Heart Electrical Wiring Aims to Guide Congenital Heart Repair
- New CAR T-Cell Therapy Enables Transplants in Hard-to-Match Kidney Patients
- CE-Marked Ultrasonic Shears Streamline Breast and Thyroid Surgery
- Small Cryoprobe Outperforms Forceps in Lung Biopsy Trial
- Natural Bypass Score May Guide Care in Chronic Coronary Blockages
- Navigation Instruments Cleared for Posterior Cervical Fusion Procedures
- Bioengineered Heart Patch Improves Cardiac Function in Advanced Heart Failure
- Fracture Plating System Combines Anatomical Fit with Streamlined Instrumentation
- Surgical Robotic System Gains CE Mark for Minimally Invasive Procedures
- Pink Noise Stimulation Approach Could Support Safer Anesthesia
- BD Launches Elyra Laser Platform for Kidney Stone and Soft Tissue Procedures
- Anesthesia-Sparing System Targets Faster Ureteral Stone Treatment
- Stretchable Bioelectronic Implant Lowers Blood Pressure in Preclinical Study
- FDA-Cleared Nerve Stimulator Advances Intraoperative Peripheral Nerve Assessment
- Intravascular Lithotripsy Catheter Advances Treatment of Calcified Coronary Disease
- Handheld AI Endomicroscope Enables Real-Time Precancer Detection at Point of Care
Channels
Artificial Intelligence
view channel
AI Platform Supports Noninvasive Remote Hemodynamic Monitoring in Heart Failure
Heart failure remains a leading cause of hospitalization in adults over 65, affecting more than 6.7 million people in the U.S. Clinicians often lose visibility into hemodynamic deterioration once patients... Read more
AI Tool Predicts Unplanned Care and Symptom Burden in Cancer Survivors
Unplanned emergency visits and hospitalizations remain common in cancer survivorship, when routine clinical contact often tapers while new symptoms emerge. These events reflect unmet needs and disrupt... Read moreCritical Care
view channel
Handheld ECG Algorithm Shows Promise for At-Home Heart Attack Risk Assessment
Chest pain remains one of the most common emergency presentations, yet determining which patients are experiencing a heart attack outside the hospital is challenging. Delays from symptom onset to hospital... Read more
Smartphone Heart Rhythm App Reduces Unnecessary Cardioversion Procedures
Atrial fibrillation, an irregular and often rapid heart rhythm, is the most common arrhythmia in adults. Elective electrical cardioversion is frequently canceled on the day of treatment when patients revert... Read morePatient Care
view channel
AI Avatar Doctor Improves Patient Understanding Before Radiotherapy
Radiation oncology consultations require patients to grasp complex concepts quickly, yet anxiety and information overload often undermine understanding and informed consent. Poor comprehension can also... Read more
Wearable Sleep Data Predict Adherence to Pulmonary Rehabilitation
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a long-term lung disorder that makes breathing difficult and often disturbs sleep, reducing energy for daily activities. Limited engagement in pulmonary... Read moreHealth IT
view channel
AI-Native EHR Achieves EU Medical Device Certification
InterSystems (Boston, MA, USA) announced that its IntelliCare electronic health record (EHR) solutions have been certified as Class IIa medical devices under the European Union Medical Device Regulation... Read more
EHR-Integrated Screening Workflow Detects Cognitive Impairment at Admission
Cognitive impairment involves difficulties with thinking, learning, memory, and decision-making, and is more common in older adults. In U.S. hospitals, more than 40% of admitted older adults have dementia,... Read morePoint of Care
view channel
Portable MRI System Accelerates Emergency Brain Imaging and Triage
Emergency departments frequently face delays accessing conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for patients with suspected neurological emergencies. Such waits can slow triage, prolong boarding,... Read more







