1. The scope of operative general paediatric surgical diseases in South Africa—the Chris Hani Baragwanath experience
- Author
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Maame Tekyiwa Botchway, Deirdre Kruger, Charles Adjei Manful, and Andrew Grieve
- Subjects
Paediatric surgical diseases ,Congenital anomalies ,Operative burden ,South Africa ,Global surgery ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Abstract Background Infectious diseases have always been the lime light of global health with very little focus on childhood surgical conditions despite the fact that children constitute about half of the population in LMICs. A significant proportion of the burden of global disease can be reduced by surgical intervention. South Africa is one of the pioneers of the practice of paediatric surgery in Africa with a great burden of paediatric surgical conditions. Few studies, if any, have investigated the burden of operative paediatric surgical procedures in South Africa. Therefore, this retrospective study aimed to look at the scope of operative paediatric surgical procedures at the Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital (CHBAH) based in Johannesburg, South Africa, and reports on the numbers of elective and emergency procedures over a 12-month study period. Results There were 1699 operative general paediatric surgical procedures of which 61.7% were electives and 38.3% were emergencies. The scope of general paediatric surgical conditions operated on fell under the categories of congenital anomalies, infections and tumours. Of these, surgeries for congenital anomalies were performed in almost all the subspecialties. Conclusion There is a high operative paediatric surgical burden at the CHBAH. The role of paediatric surgical care as an essential component of global health cannot be underrated.
- Published
- 2021
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