| Literature DB >> 31263686 |
John S K Murala1, Tom R Karl2, A Thomas Pezzella3.
Abstract
In low and mid-income countries, there has been a 50% global decrease in the incidence of preventable deaths of children since 1990. However, the mortality from non-communicable diseases (NCD) such as congenital heart disease (CHD) has not changed. Of the estimated 1.3 million children born with CHD annually, over 90% do not have access to cardiac care. With the increasing fertility rates in sub-Saharan Africa, the health burden of CHD will increase as well. Over the last 30 years much has been achieved with short term cardiac medical missions. However, much remains to be done to provide long term solutions needed to achieve the sustainable development goal of reducing deaths of children <5 years of age. This review discusses the present status and the need for a paradigm shift to achieve long term sustainability.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac disease; children; congenital; developing countries; humanitarian medicine; rheumatic heart disease
Year: 2019 PMID: 31263686 PMCID: PMC6584790 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2019.00214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Causes of global mortality for children <5 years' age.
Figure 2Total annual birth of children with CHD by continent wise. Total number is roughly 1,310,000. Similar number with bicuspid aortic valves. Reproduced with permission from Hoffman (4).
Figure 3The various organizations providing cardiac care in LMICs.
Some groups doing cardiac surgical missions.
| 1 | American College of Surgeons | |
| 2 | Bambini/Cardiopatici Nel Mondo | |
| 3 | Be Like Brit | |
| 4 | Cardiostart | |
| 5 | Chain of hope | |
| 6 | Children's Heart link | |
| 7 | Crudem | |
| 8 | CTSNET | |
| 9 | European Association for Cardiothoracic Surgery | |
| 10 | Earth Med | |
| 11 | European heart for Children | |
| 12 | For hearts and Souls | |
| 13 | Foundation Mauritanienne duCoeur | |
| 14 | Frontier Lifeline | |
| 15 | Gift of Life International, Inc. | |
| 16 | Global Healing | |
| 17 | Global Heart Network | |
| 18 | Global Impact | |
| 19 | Haitian Hearts | |
| 20 | Healing the Children | |
| 21 | Hearts Around the World | |
| 22 | Heart to Heart | |
| 23 | Heartbeat International Foundation | |
| 24 | Heart Care International | |
| 25 | Hearts for All | |
| 26 | International Aid | |
| 27 | International Children's Heart Foundation | |
| 28 | International Children's Heart Fund | |
| 29 | Heal A Child | |
| 30 | Magdi Yacoub Foundation | |
| 31 | MAP International | |
| 32 | Mending Kids International | |
| 33 | Mercy Ships | |
| 34 | Novick Cardiac Alliance | |
| 35 | Open Heart International | |
| 36 | Palestine Children's Relief Fund | |
| 37 | Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons | |
| 38 | Physicians for Peace | |
| 39 | Project Kids | |
| 40 | Project Haiti Heart | |
| 41 | Project Hope | |
| 42 | Project Open Hearts | |
| 43 | Project Medishare | |
| 44 | Russian Gift of Life | |
| 45 | Samaritan's Purse-International Relief | |
| 46 | Save A Childs Heart Foundation | |
| 47 | Surgeons of Hope Foundation | |
| 48 | Team Heart- Rwanda | |
| 49 | The Heart of a Child Foundation | |
| 50 | The Childrens Lifeline | |
| 51 | Vina Capital Foundation | |
| 52 | Walter Sisulu Pediatric Cardiac Foundation | |
| 53 | World Heart Federation | |
| 54 | World Pediatric Project |
Source- International Children's Heart Fund website (.
The list of resources and the contingency plans for a short-term mission (Dr. Nunn).
| We should take adequate staff. Limit doctors and take more nurses, OR, ICU, anesthetic, and floor staff | Loss of water, Oxygen, and Electrical supply to OR and ICU. It will happen at some point |
| Biomedical staff are important ICU staff must back up local staff | Hand ventilating every patient in OR and ICU |
| Team manager role is critical | Emergency evacuation |
| We should select people who are “lateral thinkers” and who are willing to innovate in given circumstances- especially surgical and perfusion teams | Dealing with all possible post-operative complications in ICU |
| We should take enough materials and equipment | Local equipment failure e.g., we should have portable monitors in case of failure of standard monitors |
| We must take enough drugs for all contingencies | Emergency and resuscitation drugs |
| We must be prepared for inadequate blood banking support. We must take hemostatic agents e.g., Tranexamic acid and if possible, Factor VII A components | Provision for using fresh whole blood if components are not available. Will need to stock with blood drawing kits |
| We must take enough instruments/drapes/dressings | Local sterilization equipment failures |
The Do's and Don'ts in a short-term mission (Dr. Nunn).
| The trip should only happen at the invitation of the host country | We should not force a team onto the host if they are not ready for us |
| We should engage with the local administrators and provide positive feedback each trip and ask them what they would like to achieve on the next trip and try to put that into practice | We should not impose our strategy on the host. Successful teams are those whose mission aligns with that of the host |
| Training must be hands on and very much “do as I do”, rather than “do as I say” | We should not compromise on patient safety |
| We must work within the local politics, local trainees …. Competencies…… | We just do not know all the background linkages between people in another society and can quickly offend |
| These things take time and certainly the worst thing is to try to tell the local administrators what to do | This also applies to local funding We have to say to ourselves, “this is the reality, how are we going to get done what we came here to do?” More importantly though, local funding needs to build and sustain the program that develops from these visits, so it is the essential ingredient for home grown success long term |
| Well one thing we will do is do it ethically and without compromise and try to live by example | We must be wary of using the voluntary work as a conduit for private practice |
| We should try to achieve outcomes that are the same as our parent institution | Deaths will be long remembered and will not lead to good will amongst the administrators and providers of funds when we are not there |
| We should select patients who can expect a good outcome and can reasonably be expected to be helped by the local team when they get up to speed | This means that heroic surgery should not be done. Just because the patient will die if we do not “have a go” is the worst way to select the patients for surgery |
| Attend socials but limit them so we can rest and concentrate on work ahead | Try not to spend every evening going to social functions. It is natural for a team to want to socialize but those working days are hard and no one can perform to their own standard with that dragging them back each day. We do not do it at home so how can we think we are super human on one of the trips |
| We should take a very long-term view about how quickly the local team will come up to speed | We must stop being critical of the hosts |
| Security is very important and must be provided by the local teams. Professional indemnity must be granted from the government of the country | In unsafe areas we should not venture on our own- no “Bravado” actions |
| Immunization must be a pre-requisite for all team members |
Figure 4Essentials for a cardiac OR (OR, Operation rom; IV, Intravenous pole; IAB, Intraaortic Balloon pump). Reproduced with permission from Dr.Pezzella http://www.ichfund.org/Content/OR-ICU_lists.htm.
Figure 5Essentials for an ICU (IV, Intraveonus; IAB, Intraaortic Ballon pump). Reproduced with permission from Dr.Pezzella http://www.ichfund.org/Content/OR-ICU_lists.htm.