21 research outputs found

    Access and Financial Burden for Patients Seeking Essential Surgical Care in Pakistan

    Get PDF
    Background: Pakistan is a lower middle-income country in South Asia with a population of over 220 million. With the recent development of national health programs focusing on surgical care, two areas of high priority for research and policy are access and financial risk protection related to surgery. This is the first study in Pakistan to nationally assess geographic access and expenditures for patients undergoing surgery. Methods: This is a cross-sectional study of patients undergoing laparotomy, cesarean section, and surgical management of a fracture at public tertiary care hospitals across the country. A validated financial risk protection tool was adapted for our study to collect data on the socio-economic characteristics of patients, geographic access, and out-of-pocket expenditure. Results: A total of 526 patients were surveyed at 13 public hospitals. 73.8% of patients had 2-hour access to the facility where they underwent their respective surgical procedures. A majority (53%) of patients were poor at baseline, and 79.5% and 70.3% of patients experienced catastrophic health expenditure and impoverishing health expenditure, respectively. Discussion: A substantial number of patients face long travel times to access essential surgical care and face a high percentage of impoverishing health expenditure and catastrophic health expenditure during this process. This study provides valuable baseline data to health policymakers for reform efforts that are underway. Conclusions: Strengthening surgical infrastructure and services in the existing network of public sector first-level facilities has the potential to dramatically improve emergency and essential surgical care across the country

    'We are all serving the same Ugandans' : A nationwide mixed-methods evaluation of private sector surgical capacity in Uganda

    No full text
    Introduction Half of all Ugandans (49%) turn to the private or private-not-for-profit (PNFP) sectors when faced with illness, yet little is known about the capacity of these sectors to deliver surgical services. We partnered with the Ministry of Health to conduct a nationwide mixed-methods evaluation of private and PNFP surgical capacity in Uganda. Methods A standardized validated facility assessment tool was utilized to assess facility infrastructure, service delivery, workforce, information management, and financing at a randomized nationally representative sample of 16 private and PNFP hospitals. Semi-structured interviews were conducted to qualitatively explore facilitating factors and barriers to surgical, obstetric and anaesthesia (SOA) care. Hospitals walk-throughs and retrospective reviews of operative logbooks were completed. Results Hospitals had a median of 177 beds and two operating rooms. Ten hospitals (62.5%) were able to perform all Bellwether procedures (cesarean section, laparotomy and open fracture treatment). Thirty-day surgical volume averaged 102 cases per facility. While most hospitals had electricity, oxygen, running water, and necessary equipment, many reported pervasive shortages of blood, surgical consumables, and anesthetic drugs. Several themes emerged from the qualitative analysis: (1) geographic distance and limited transportation options delay reaching care; (2) workforce shortages impede the delivery of surgical care; (3) emergency and obstetric volume overwhelm the surgical system; (4) medical and non-medical costs delay seeking, reaching, and receiving care; and (5) there is poor coordination of care with insufficient support systems. Conclusion As in Uganda's public sector, barriers to surgery in private and PNFP hospitals in Uganda are cross-cutting and closely tied to resource availability. Critical policy and programmatic developments are essential to build and strengthen Ugandan surgical capacity across all sectors

    Additional file 1: of Rejection, acceptance and the spectrum between: understanding male attitudes and experiences towards conflict-related sexual violence in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo

    No full text
    Topic Guide. Topic Guide: Men with Relatives Affected by Sexual Violence. Questionnaire to begin after consent script is read and verbal informed consent is obtained from each participant. (DOCX 16 kb

    Bridging the data gap in global health: an electronic surgical outcomes database at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital, Uganda

    No full text
    Background: Annually, an estimated 17 million lives are lost from conditions requiring surgical care and at least 77·2 million disability-adjusted life-years could be averted through provision of basic surgical services. Despite the staggering burden of surgical disease, there are scarce data available to track current capacity, volume, epidemiology, outcomes, and quality of surgical care delivery in low-income and middle-income countries. We aimed to organise the hospital record system into a high-quality and high-fidelity searchable database that can be used to measure and guide expansion and provision of quality care at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital (MRRH) in western Uganda. Methods: Initiated in 2013, the Surgical Services QUality Assessment Database (SQUAD) arose from a shared commitment to improving surgical quality and capacity through a collaboration between MRRH and Massachusetts General Hospital. SQUAD systematically enrols and collects data on all surgical patients admitted to MRRH. Data are extracted from patient charts and admission, discharge, and operation logbooks by trained clerks—a process overseen by a data manager/statistician. Data variables are grouped into patient demographics, disease characteristics, cadre of clinicians, interventions, outcomes, and time. Data access and use is supervised by a committee of representatives. Findings: To date, SQUAD contains more than 49 000 patient records in a searchable electronic database. Quality assurance reports have been produced for internal use at MRRH, and in-hospital initiatives have been made in response to findings. SQUAD was prospectively validated in 2016, and retrospective validation studies are currently underway. Interpretation: Ongoing challenges include transitioning data capture methods from chart and log book review to a point-of-care electronic medical register and record system, while maintaining data entry. A future objective is the dissemination of clinical outcome reports through peer reviewed publications by authors from the collaborating institutions. Funding: GE Foundation, Milton Foundation, Kletjian Foundation, and MGH Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine

    Estimating access to surgical care: A community centered national household survey from Pakistan

    No full text
    Pakistan is a lower middle-income country in South Asia with a population of 225 million. No estimate for surgical care access exists for the country. We postulate the estimated access to surgical care is less than the minimum 80% to be achieved by 2030. We conducted a randomized, stratified two-stage cluster household survey. A sample of 770 households was selected using 2017 census frames from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. Data was collected on choice of hospital and travel time to the chosen hospital for C-section, laparotomy, open fracture repair (OFR), and specialized surgery. Analysis was conducted using Stata 14. Access to all Bellwether surgeries (C-section, laparotomy, and open fracture repair) in Pakistan is estimated to be 74.8%. However, estimated access in rural areas and the provinces of Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Sindh is far less than in urban areas and in Punjab and Islamabad. Estimated access to C-sections is more compared to OFR, laparotomy, and specialized surgery. Health system strengthening efforts should focus on improving surgical care access in rural areas and in Balochistan, KP, and Sindh. More focus is required on standardizing the availability and quality of surgical services in secondary-level hospitals.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
    corecore