| Literature DB >> 26674297 |
Miguel Trelles1, Lynette Dominguez1, Katie Tayler-Smith2, Katrin Kisswani3, Alberto Zerboni4, Thierry Vandenborre4, Silvia Dallatomasina3, Alaa Rahmoun5, Marie-Christine Ferir3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since 2011, civil war has crippled Syria leaving much of the population without access to healthcare. Various field hospitals have been clandestinely set up to provide basic healthcare but few have been able to provide quality surgical care. In 2012, Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) began providing surgical care in the Jabal al-Akrad region of north-western Syria. Based on the MSF experience, we describe, for the period 5th September 2012 to 1st January 2014: a) the volume and profile of surgical cases, b) the volume and type of anaesthetic and surgical procedures performed, and c) the intraoperative mortality rate.Entities:
Keywords: Conflict settings; Minimum standards of care; Quality surgical care; Syria
Year: 2015 PMID: 26674297 PMCID: PMC4678579 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-015-0064-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Measures taken by MSF to ensure the provision of quality surgical care in Jabal Akkrad, Syria
| Essential conditions for the provision of quality surgical care | Measures taken to achieve these conditions in the cave and chicken farm |
|---|---|
| Adequate infrastructure, including protection from the external environment and appropriate electricity and lighting. | • The standard design of the field hospital was adapted to meet the functional/medical needs of the hospital, to ensure the ‘safe’ circuit of surgical patients (in terms of hygiene standards) and to accommodate for the challenges around lack of quality space, lack of infrastructure and lack of security, all the while ensuring that quality care of care would not be compromised. Essential for the design and timely implementation of these technical solutions was the presence of highly experienced personnel (medical staff who could clearly identify the functional needs of the hospital and logistics staff with extensive experience in emergency hospital design and set-up). |
| Adequate water and sanitation provisions, waste management being a key priority | • Minimum water requirements were pre-set at 100 L water/anaesthesia and 40–60 L water/person/day in the IPD. At the cave, three water points were installed: one for emergency care, one for scrubbing, and one for sterilisation; at the abandoned chicken farm, a 30,000 L water tank was already in place. To avoid potential contamination of water with previously used toxic chemicals at the farm, the tank was emptied, cleaned, disinfected with chlorine and filled again. |
| Availability of all essential disposables, drugs and equipment | • A regular supply of drugs, material and equipment is an essential MSF pre-requisite in order to guarantee no ruptures in care. A clandestine supply line from Turkey ensured this, with supplies being transported across the Turkish border either by truck (with support of the Turkish Red Crescent) or hand-carried. |
| Strict adherence to hygiene requirements and universal precautions | • Hydro-alcoholic solution was made readily available. |
| Mandatory use of sterile equipment for surgical and anaesthesia procedures | • In the cave, dry-heat sterilization was installed |
| Blood transfusion capability | • In the cave, there was no blood bank in place. Even so, several blood transfusions were performed when indicated if suitable donors could be identified on the spot. |
| Adequate human resources in quantity and quality | • Human resource requirements focused on sufficiency in numbers and sufficiency in skill level. |
American Society of Anaesthesiologists (ASA) score
| Class 1: | → Patient in apparent good health notwithstanding his surgical problem |
| → Limitations on activity: none | |
| → Limitations on activity: none | |
| → Excluded: persons at extremes of age (very young, very old) | |
| Class 2: | → Patient with mild systemic disease (e.g., mild hypertension, mild-moderate anaemia) |
| → Patient’s health: disease of one body system | |
| → Status of underlying disease: well controlled | |
| → Limitations on activity: none | |
| → Danger of death: none | |
| Class 3: | → Patient with systemic disease severe enough to limit activity but not incapacitating |
| → Patient’s health: disease of more than one body system or one major system | |
| → Limitations on activity: present but not incapacitated | |
| → Danger of death: no immediate danger | |
| Class 4: | → Patient with severe incapacitating disease that is a constant threat to life |
| → Patient’s health: poor, with at least one severe disease | |
| → Status of underlying disease: poorly controlled or end-stage | |
| → Limitations on activity: incapacitated | |
| → Danger of death: possible | |
| Class 5: | → Moribund patient not expected to survive 24 h with or without surgery |
| → Patient’s health: very poor, moribund | |
| → Limitations on activity: incapacitated | |
| → Danger of death: imminent | |
| Class 6: | → A declared brain-dead patient whose organs are being removed for donor purposes |
Profile of all new surgical patients managed at the MSF field hospital in Jabal al-Akrad, Syria (5th September 2012-1st January 2014)
| Variable |
|
|---|---|
| Total | 578 |
| Sex | |
| Female | 250 (43) |
| Male | 328 (57) |
| Age (years) | |
| 0–14 | 50 (9) |
| 15–29 | 332 (57) |
| 30–44 | 145 (25) |
| ≥45 | 51 (9) |
| Median [IQR] | 25 (21–32) |
| ASA score | |
| 1 | 483 (84) |
| 2 | 69 (12) |
| 3 | 19 (3) |
| 4 | 6 (1) |
| 5 | 1 (0.2) |
| Surgical indication | |
| Violent trauma | 254 (44) |
| Obstetric emergencies | 191 (33) |
| Accidental trauma | 59 (10) |
| Non-traumatic and non-obstetric pathologies | 74 (13) |
IQR Interquartile range, ASA American Society of Anaesthesiologists
Type of anaesthesia and surgical procedures performed at the MSF field hospital in Jabal al-Akrad, Syria (5th September 2012-1st January 2014)
| Variable |
|
|---|---|
| Type of anaesthetic procedures ( | |
| General without intubation | 337 (47) |
| Spinal | 179 (25) |
| General with intubation | 122 (17) |
| Local/regional | 53 (7) |
| Combined | 21 (3) |
| Type of surgical procedures ( | |
| Minor/ Wound care | 450 (54) |
| Caesarean-sections | 153 (18) |
| Visceral surgery | 114 (14) |
| Orthopaedic/specialised surgery | 64 (8) |
| Gynaeco-obstetric surgerya | 50 (6) |
aExcluding caesarean sections