Background: Uganda\u2019s ageing population (age 50 years and older)
will nearly double from 2015 to 2050. HIV/AIDS, diabetes, stroke among
other disease processes have been studied in the elderly population.
However, the burden of disease from surgically-treatable conditions is
unknown. Objectives: To determine the proportion of adults above 50
years with unmet surgical need and deaths attributable to probable
surgically-treatable conditions. Methods: A cluster randomized sample
representing the national population of Uganda was enumerated. The
previously validated Surgeons Overseas assessment of surgical need
instrument, a head-to-toe verbal interview, was used to determine any
surgically-treatable conditions in two randomly-selected living
household members. Deaths were detailed by heads of households.
Weighted metrics are calculated taking sampling design into
consideration and Taylor series linearization was used for sampling
error estimation. Results: The study enumerated 425 individuals above
age 50 years. The prevalence proportion of unmet surgical need was
27.8% (95%CI, 22.1-34.3). This extrapolates to 694,722 (95%CI,
552,279-857,157) individuals living with one or more surgically
treatable conditions. The North sub-region was observed to have the
highest prevalence proportion. Nearly two out of five household deaths
(37.9%) were attributed to probable surgically treatable causes.
Conclusion: There is disproportionately high need for surgical care
among the ageing population of Uganda with approximately 700,000
consultations needed. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ahs.v19i1.54
Cite as: Tran TM, Fuller AT, Butler EK, Muhumuza C, Ssennono VF,
Vissoci JR, et al. Surgical need among the ageing population of Uganda.
Afri Health Sci. 2019;19(1). 1778-1788. https:// dx.doi. org/10.4314/
ahs. v19i1.5