219 research outputs found
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Unilateral Cleft Lip and Nasal Repair: Techniques and Principles
The Mashhad University of Medical Sciences and the Sheikh Hospital in Mashhad sponsored a Cleft Lip and Palate Workshop 30 April – 1 May 2009. During the Workshop, 6 surgical cases were performed and televised live to the audience attending the conference. Two of those cases were unilateral cleft lip repairs. The surgical technique used to repair these patients by the primary author (JGM) is a hybrid technique. It has evolved over the last decade as a result of prior surgical literature as well as first hand observation of various surgical colleagues. The following manuscript describes the surgical technique used at the Cleft Workshop in a step-wise or atlas-like fashion. The technique portion of the paper describes the repair of the unilateral cleft lip and nasal deformity in roughly the order the first author typically performs the procedure. More importantly, the final section of the paper details the principles that form the foundation for the techniques described
An opportunity for diagonal development in global surgery: cleft lip and palate care in resource-limited settings
Global cleft surgery missions have provided much-needed care to millions of poor patients worldwide. Still, surgical capacity in low- and middle-income countries is generally inadequate. Through surgical missions, global cleft care has largely ascribed to a vertical model of healthcare delivery, which is disease specific, and tends to deliver services parallel to, but not necessarily within, the local healthcare system. The vertical model has been used to address infectious diseases as well as humanitarian emergencies. By contrast, a horizontal model for healthcare delivery tends to focus on long-term investments in public health infrastructure and human capital and has less often been implemented by humanitarian groups for a variety of reasons. As surgical care is an integral component of basic healthcare, the plastic surgery community must challenge itself to address the burden of specific disease entities, such as cleft lip and palate, in a way that sustainably expands and enriches global surgical care as a whole. In this paper, we describe a diagonal care delivery model, whereby cleft missions can enrich surgical capacity through integration into sustainable, local care delivery systems. Furthermore, we examine the applications of diagonal development to cleft care specifically and global surgical care more broadly
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Health and Economic Benefits of Improved Injury Prevention and Trauma Care Worldwide
Objectives: Injury is a significant source of morbidity and mortality worldwide, and often disproportionately affects younger, more productive members of society. While many have made the case for improved injury prevention and trauma care, health system development in low- and middle-income countries is often limited by resources. This study aims to determine the economic benefit of improved injury prevention and trauma care in low- and middle-income countries. Methods: This study uses existing data on injury mortality worldwide from the 2010 Global Burden of Disease Study to estimate the number of lives that could be saved if injury mortality rates in low- and middle-income countries could be reduced to rates in high-income countries. Using economic modeling – through the human capital approach and the value of a statistical life approach – the study then demonstrates the associated economic benefit of these lives saved. Results: 88 percent of injury-related deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. If injury mortality rates in low- and middle-income countries were reduced to rates in high-income countries, 2,117,500 lives could be saved per year. This would result in between 49 million and 52 million disability adjusted life years averted per year, with discounting and age weighting. Using the human capital approach, the associated economic benefit of reducing mortality rates ranges from 261 billion with discounting and age weighting. Using the value of a statistical life approach, the benefit is between 758 and 786 billion dollars per year. Conclusions: Reducing injury mortality in low- and middle-income countries could save over 2 million lives per year and provide significant economic benefit globally. Further investments in trauma care and injury prevention are needed
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An Opportunity for Diagonal Development in Global Surgery: Cleft Lip and Palate Care in Resource-Limited Settings
Global cleft surgery missions have provided much-needed care to millions of poor patients worldwide. Still, surgical capacity in low- and middle-income countries is generally inadequate. Through surgical missions, global cleft care has largely ascribed to a vertical model of healthcare delivery, which is disease specific, and tends to deliver services parallel to, but not necessarily within, the local healthcare system. The vertical model has been used to address infectious diseases as well as humanitarian emergencies. By contrast, a horizontal model for healthcare delivery tends to focus on long-term investments in public health infrastructure and human capital and has less often been implemented by humanitarian groups for a variety of reasons. As surgical care is an integral component of basic healthcare, the plastic surgery community must challenge itself to address the burden of specific disease entities, such as cleft lip and palate, in a way that sustainably expands and enriches global surgical care as a whole. In this paper, we describe a diagonal care delivery model, whereby cleft missions can enrich surgical capacity through integration into sustainable, local care delivery systems. Furthermore, we examine the applications of diagonal development to cleft care specifically and global surgical care more broadly
Cost-eff ectiveness of surgery and its policy implications for global health: a systematic review and analysis
Background The perception of surgery as expensive and complex might be a barrier to its widespread acceptance in global
health eff orts. We did a systematic review and analysis of cost-eff ectiveness studies that assess surgical interventions in
low-income and middle-income countries to help quantify the potential value of surgery.
Methods We searched Medline for all relevant articles published between Jan 1, 1996 and Jan 31, 2013, and searched
the reference lists of retrieved articles. We converted all results to 2012 US13·78 per disability-adjusted
life year [DALY]) was similar to that of standard vaccinations (6·48–22·04 per DALY). Median CERs of cleft lip or palate repair (82·32 per DALY), hydrocephalus surgery (136 per DALY) were
similar to that of the BCG vaccine (315·12 per
DALY) and orthopaedic surgery (500·41–706·54 per DALY) and HIV treatment with multidrug antiretroviral therapy
($453·74–648·20 per DALY).
Interpretation Our fi ndings suggest that many essential surgical interventions are cost-eff ective or very cost-eff ective
in resource-poor countries. Quantifi cation of the economic value of surgery provides a strong argument for the
expansion of global surgery’s role in the global health movement. However, economic value should not be the only
argument for resource allocation—other organisational, ethical, and political arguments can also be made for its
inclusion
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From blockchain technology to global health equity: can cryptocurrencies finance universal health coverage?
Blockchain technology and cryptocurrencies could remake global health financing and usher in an era global health equity and universal health coverage. We outline and provide examples for at least four important ways in which this potential disruption of traditional global health funding mechanisms could occur: universal access to financing through direct transactions without third parties; novel new multilateral financing mechanisms; increased security and reduced fraud and corruption; and the opportunity for open markets for healthcare data that drive discovery and innovation. We see these issues as a paramount to the delivery of healthcare worldwide and relevant for payers and providers of healthcare at state, national and global levels; for government and non-governmental organisations; and for global aid organisations, including the WHO, International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group
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Nasal Glioma: Prenatal Diagnosis and Multidisciplinary Surgical Approach
Nasal gliomas are congenital, nonmalignant rests of neuroglial tissue that typically present as a craniofacial mass. The differential diagnosis of such masses includes lesions that often require the involvement of various surgical subspecialties, including otolaryngology, neurosurgery, plastic surgery, and ophthalmology. Early surgical excision of these masses is advised to minimize nasal and craniofacial distortion. Accordingly, early diagnosis and management planning are paramount, and advances in prenatal imaging are creating a new role for obstetricians and radiologists in the initiation of diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. We describe the case history of a young patient found to have a craniofacial mass on routine prenatal ultrasound and subsequently managed with a multidisciplinary team approach
Assessing the inclusion of children's surgical care in National Surgical, Obstetric and Anaesthesia Plans:a policy content analysis
Objective While National Surgical, Obstetric and Anaesthesia Plans (NSOAPs) have emerged as a strategy to strengthen and scale up surgical healthcare systems in low/middle-income countries (LMICs), the degree to which children's surgery is addressed is not well-known. This study aims to assess the inclusion of children's surgical care among existing NSOAPs, identify practice examples and provide recommendations to guide inclusion of children's surgical care in future policies. Design We performed two qualitative content analyses to assess the inclusion of children's surgical care among NSOAPs. We applied a conventional (inductive) content analysis approach to identify themes and patterns, and developed a framework based on the Global Initiative for Children's Surgery's Optimal Resources for Children's Surgery document. We then used this framework to conduct a directed (deductive) content analysis of the NSOAPs of Ethiopia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Tanzania and Zambia. Results Our framework for the inclusion of children's surgical care in NSOAPs included seven domains. We evaluated six NSOAPs with all addressing at least two of the domains. All six NSOAPs addressed € human resources and training' and € infrastructure', four addressed € service delivery', three addressed € governance and financing', two included € research, evaluation and quality improvement', and one NSOAP addressed € equipment and supplies' and € advocacy and awareness'. Conclusions Additional focus must be placed on the development of surgical healthcare systems for children in LMICs. This requires a focus on children's surgical care separate from adult surgical care in the scaling up of surgical healthcare systems, including children-focused needs assessments and the inclusion of children's surgery providers in the process. This study proposes a framework for evaluating NSOAPs, highlights practice examples and suggests recommendations for the development of future policies.</p
Global access to surgical care: a modelling study
Background More than 2 billion people are unable to receive surgical care based on operating theatre density alone.
The vision of the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery is universal access to safe, aff ordable surgical and anaesthesia
care when needed. We aimed to estimate the number of individuals worldwide without access to surgical services as
defi ned by the Commission’s vision.
Methods We modelled access to surgical services in 196 countries with respect to four dimensions: timeliness,
surgical capacity, safety, and aff ordability. We built a chance tree for each country to model the probability of surgical
access with respect to each dimension, and from this we constructed a statistical model to estimate the proportion of
the population in each country that does not have access to surgical services. We accounted for uncertainty with oneway
sensitivity analyses, multiple imputation for missing data, and probabilistic sensitivity analysis.
Findings At least 4·8 billion people (95% posterior credible interval 4·6–5·0 [67%, 64–70]) of the world’s population
do not have access to surgery. The proportion of the population without access varied widely when stratifi ed by
epidemiological region: greater than 95% of the population in south Asia and central, eastern, and western sub-
Saharan Africa do not have access to care, whereas less than 5% of the population in Australasia, high-income North
America, and western Europe lack access.
Interpretation Most of the world’s population does not have access to surgical care, and access is inequitably
distributed. The near absence of access in many low-income and middle-income countries represents a crisis, and as
the global health community continues to support the advancement of universal health coverage, increasing access to
surgical services will play a central role in ensuring health care for all
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