Literature DB >> 19588776

Vasectomy under local anaesthesia performed free of charge as a family planning service: complications and results.

G S Trollip1, M Fisher, A Naidoo, P D Theron, C F Heyns.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of vasectomy performed under local anaesthesia by junior doctors at a secondary level hospital as part of a free family planning service.
METHOD: Men requesting vasectomy were counselled and given written instructions to use alternative contraception until two semen analyses 3 and 4 months after vasectomy had confirmed azoospermia. Bilateral vasectomy was performed as an outpatient procedure under local anaesthesia by junior urology registrars. Statistical analysis was performed using the Mann-Whitney, Kruskal-Wallis, Fisher's exact or Spearman's rank correlation tests as appropriate.
RESULTS: Between January 2004 and December 2005, 479 men underwent vasectomy at Karl Bremer Hospital, Western Cape, South Africa; their average age was 36.1 (range 21 - 66) years, they had a median of 2 (range 0 - 10) children, and only 19% had 4 or more children. The average operation time was 15.5 (range 5 - 53) minutes. Complications occurred in 12.9%; these were pain (7.3%), swelling (5.4%), haematoma (1.3%), sepsis (1%), difficulty locating the vas (1%), vasovagal episode (0.6%), bleeding (0.6%), wound rupture (0.4%) and dysuria (0.2%) (some men had more than one complication). Of the men 63.3% returned for one semen analysis and 17.5% for a second. The vasectomy failure rate ranged from 0.4% (sperm persisting > 365 days after vasectomy) to 2.3% (sperm seen > 180 days after vasectomy and/or in the second semen specimen). No pregnancies were reported. The complication (5.6%) and failure rates (0%) were lowest for the registrar who had performed the smallest number of vasectomies and whose average operation time was longest. Comparing the first one-third of procedures performed by each of the doctors with the last one-third, there was a significant decrease in average operating times but not in complication rates.
CONCLUSIONS: Vasectomy can be performed safely and effectively by junior doctors as an outpatient procedure under local anaesthesia, and should be actively promoted in South Africa as a safe and effective form of male contraception.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19588776

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  S Afr Med J


  2 in total

1.  Use of text messaging to audit early clinical outcome following vasectomy in primary care.

Authors:  Graham Cooper; Jean Walker; Douglas Harris; Rorie Stewart; Douglas Nicol; Mike Ogg
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 5.386

Review 2.  A Review of 10 Years of Vasectomy Programming and Research in Low-Resource Settings.

Authors:  Dominick Shattuck; Brian Perry; Catherine Packer; Dawn Chin Quee
Journal:  Glob Health Sci Pract       Date:  2016-12-28
  2 in total

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