| Literature DB >> 34866684 |
Justina O Seyi-Olajide1, Jamie E Anderson2, Omolara M Williams3, Omolara Faboya1, Joseph O Amedu4, Stanley Nc Anyanwu5, Abraham Bethuel-Kasimu6, Olubunmi A Lawal7, Opubo B da Lilly-Tariah8, Bisola Onajin-Obembe9, Diana L Farmer10, Emmanuel A Ameh11.
Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that strengthening surgical care within existing health systems will strengthen the overall health-care system. However, Nigeria's national strategic health development plan 2018-2022 placed little emphasis on surgical care. To address the gap, we worked with professional societies and other partners to develop the national surgical, obstetric, anaesthesia and nursing plan 2019-2023. The aim was to foster actions to prioritize surgical care for the achievement of universal health coverage. In addition to creating a costed strategy to strengthen surgical care, the plan included children's surgery and nursing: two key aspects that have been neglected in other national surgical plans. Pilot implementation of the plan began in 2020, supported by a nongovernmental organization with experience in surgical care in the region. We have created specific entry points to facilitate the pilot implementation. In the pilot, an electronic surgery registry has been created; personnel are being trained in life support; nurses are being trained in safe perioperative care; biomedical technicians and sterile supplies nurses are being trained in surgical instrument repair and maintenance; and research capacity is being strengthened. In addition, the mainstream media are being mobilized to improve awareness about the plan among policy-makers and the general population. Another development partner is interested in providing support for paediatric surgery, and a children's hospital is being planned. As funding is a key challenge to full implementation, we need innovative domestic funding strategies to support and sustain implementation. (c) 2021 The authors; licensee World Health Organization.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34866684 PMCID: PMC8640693 DOI: 10.2471/BLT.20.280297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull World Health Organ ISSN: 0042-9686 Impact factor: 9.408
Baseline assessment and targets for development of Nigeria’s national surgical plan 2019–2023
| Core indicatora | Definitiona | Nigeria baseline values, 2018 | National surgical plan target 2019–2023 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Access to timely essential surgery | Proportion of the population that can access, within 2 hours, a facility that can carry out caesarean delivery, laparotomy and treatment of open fracture (the Bellwether procedures) | 100% | Published assessment: 100% | Increase by 40% over pre-implementation value by 2023 |
| Specialist surgical workforce density | Number of specialist surgical, anaesthetic and obstetric physicians who are working, per 100 000 population | 20 per 100 000 | 1.8 per 100 000 | Increase density of surgeons, anaesthetists, obstetricians to at least 5 per 100 000 by 2023 |
| Surgical volume | Procedures done in an operating theatre, per 100 000 population per year | 5000 per 100 000 | 58.6 per 100 000 | Increase surgical volume by 100% of baseline by 2023 |
| Perioperative mortality tracking | All-cause death rate before discharge in patients who have undergone a procedure in an operating theatre, divided by the total number of procedures, presented as a percentage | 100% of countries tracking mortality | NA | Achieve 100% of facilities tracking mortality by 2023 |
| Protection against impoverishing expenditure | Proportion of households protected against impoverishment from direct out-of-pocket payments for surgical and anaesthesia care | 100% | 35% | Achieve 50–75% of households protected by 2023 |
| Protection against catastrophic expenditure | Proportion of households protected against catastrophic expenditure from direct out-of-pocket payments for surgical and anaesthesia care | 100% | 36% | Achieve 50–75% of households protected by 2023 |
NA: not applicable.
a We based the assessment on the core indicators for monitoring of universal access to safe, affordable surgical and anaesthesia care set out by the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery, 2015.
Note: Because a comprehensive national survey of the surgical system would be prohibitively costly, in 2018 we carried out a survey of five states in Nigeria, selected by convenience sampling from different geopolitical zones and the federal capital territory. Assessment was done by volunteer surgical trainees, students, nurses and surgeons who visited the facilities and carried out assessments using the World Health Organization Program in Global Surgery and Social Change surgical assessment tool and a modified tool for assessment of children’s surgical capacity., Unless otherwise indicated, values for Nigeria are from our baseline assessment.
Fig. 1Nigeria’s national surgical, obstetric, anaesthesia and nursing plan for health-system strengthening
Goals, strategies and barriers to achieving Nigeria’s national surgical plan 2019–2023
| Health-system building blocka | Goals | Strategies | Barriers | Solution to barriers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infrastructure | Strengthen the surgical care infrastructure | Strengthening of existing health-care facilities at all levels | Lack of funding | Deployment of innovative financing solutions |
| Service delivery | Achieve access to surgical care within 2 hours for 75% of the population | Expansion of the workforce of surgeons, anaesthetists and obstetricians | Limited training posts | Increasing the number of training posts |
| Health information, research and metrics | Generate data | Creation of a comprehensive, integrated national electronic health-records database | Funding | Expansion of research capacity through training |
| Workforce | Increase the density of surgeons, anaesthetists and obstetricians to 5 per 100 000 population | Strengthening of postgraduate training | Limited training posts | Increasing the number of training posts |
| Health-care financing | Achieve financial risk protection for 50% of the population | Expansion of public health insurance coverage | Low budget for health care | Deployment of innovative financing solutions |
| Governance and leadership | Strengthen health care governance at all levels | Application of strategic coordination, supervised by the federal health ministry | Limited awareness of the surgical plan among policy-makers and development partners | Deployment of coordinated and targeted advocacy, including engagement with the media |
a We based our framework on the building blocks for health-system strengthening defined by the World Health Organization, 2010.
Fig. 2Pilot implementation of Nigeria’s national surgical, obstetric, anaesthesia and nursing plan