| Literature DB >> 29242749 |
Sarah Rayne1, Sule Burger2, Stephanie Van Straten1, Bruce Biccard3, Mathume Joseph Phaahla4, Martin Smith1.
Abstract
South Africa is an upper-middle-income country with widespread social and geographical inequality of surgical provision. The National Forum on Surgery and Anaesthesia in South Africa brought together various stakeholders, including government, societies, academic clinicians and the biomedical industry, to define the core strategy for a national surgical plan. During the forum, presentations and breakaway workshops explored and reported the challenges and opportunities these stakeholders may have in sustaining and improving surgical provision in South Africa. We present the recommendations of these reports with a literature review and other recent reports from organisations involved in healthcare systems in South Africa. We acknowledge the importance of access to safe and affordable surgery for all as a core component of healthcare provision for South Africa. The proposed core strategies for a South African National Surgical Plan to achieve these goals are the following. First, research will focus on high-quality interdisciplinary collaborative research and audit, which addresses the Global Surgery indices, adopts internationally consistent data points and focuses particularly on maternal mortality and the 'Bellwether procedures'. Second, workforce and training must be tailored to the country's specific surgical needs, based on a primary healthcare and district hospital model, which is supported by government and academic organisations. Third, the surgical infrastructure and service delivery needs to be strengthened by the district hospital. Finally, strong leadership with appropriate financial support by healthcare managers who partner with clinicians both locally and nationally is needed to achieve these objectives.Entities:
Keywords: Global surgery; Health Systems; South Africa; Surgical care
Year: 2017 PMID: 29242749 PMCID: PMC5584486 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2016-000170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Indicators of assessment to safe and affordable surgical and anaesthesia care, their application and route of assessment in South Africa
| LCoGS indicator | LCoGS time bound target for 2030 | Time bound target adapted for South Africa (calculated on a population of 54 million) | Current status of data | Plans arising from the NFSASA and research networks in South Africa |
| Access to essential surgery within 2 hours | A minimum of 80% coverage of essential surgical and anaesthesia services per country | 80% of the population within 2 hours travel (or 40 km as the crow flies) of a district hospital capable of surgical services | Population coverage unknown. | SAMaSS is a current project through PEASC in collaboration with StatsSA to map hospitals capable of carrying out surgical services. Using census data, population characteristics of those covered and uncovered will be described. Through design of an interactive map, identification of sites suited for upgrading to best attend underserved populations can be identified. |
| Specialist surgical workforce density | A minimum target of at least 20 surgical, anaesthesia and obstetric physicians per 100 000 population | At least 10 800 surgical, anaesthesia and obstetric physicians, with | 6329 surgical, anaesthesia and obstetric physicians registered in the country. | SAMaSS will include layering of practising registered physicians onto interactive map as described above. |
| Surgical volume | Tracking of surgical volume by 2030; a minimum of 5000 procedures per 100 000 population by 2030 | National tracking of surgical volumes, with at least 2 700 000 procedures per annum | World Bank statistics of 4852 surgeries per 100 000 (2012) | Small multicentre prospective cohort studies such as SASOS |
| POMR | Tracking of POMR by 2030; in 2020, evaluate global data and set national targets for 2030 | National tracking of POMR in all levels of hospitals. Eventual prospective tracking of POMR and complications | SASOS | Small multicentre prospective cohort studies such as SASOS, |
| Protection against impoverishing expenditure | 100% protection against impoverishment from out-of-pocket payments for surgical and anaesthesia care by 2030 | Identification of areas where out-of-pocket payments for surgical and anaesthesia care occur in public sector | World Bank statistics of 50% of people at risk (2014) | South Africa’s relatively unique situation of means testing for all government healthcare provision means that these figures, derived from a model encompassing other African countries, may not be accurate. This highlights the importance of accurate locally obtained information. |
| Protection against catastrophic expenditure | 100% protection against catastrophic expenditure from out-of-pocket payments for surgical and anaesthesia care by 2030 | Identification of areas where catastrophic expenditure from out-of-pocket payments for surgical and anaesthesia care occurs in public sector | World Bank statistics of 25.5% of people at risk (2014) |
LCoGS, Lancet Commission on Global Surgery; NFSASA, National Forum on Surgery and Anaesthesia in South Africa; PEASC, Programme for Equitable Access to Surgical Care; POMR, perioperative mortality rate; SAMaSS, South African Map to Safe Surgery; SASOS, South African Surgical Outcomes Study.