1. Pediatric Surgical Waitlist in LMICs during the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Author
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Greg Klazura, Paul Park, Ava Yap, Ruth Laverde, Emma Bryce, Maija Cheung, Ernestina Bioh, Sacha Hamilton, Phyllis Kisa, Nasser Kakembo, Michele Ugazzi, Martin Situma, Eric Borgstein, Miliard Derbew, Samuel Negash, Amezene Tadesse, Bruce Bvulani, Bertille Ki, Tapsoba Toussaint, Zaitun Bokhary, Godfrey Sama, Emmanuel Ameh, Mulenga Mulewa, Jonathan Mwansa, Ifeanyichukwu Onah, Vanda Amado, Daniel Ugarte, Fabian Massaga, Samwel Byabato, Wasiu Lanre Adeyemo, Olugbemiga Ogunlewe, Bip Nandi, and Doruk Ozgediz
- Abstract
Purpose: COVID-19 led to significant reduction in surgery worldwide. Studies, however, of the effect on surgical volume for pediatric patients in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are limited.Methods: A survey was developed to estimate waitlists in LMICs for priority surgical conditions in children. The survey was piloted and revised before it was deployed over email to 19 surgeons. Pediatric surgeons at 15 different sites in 8 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and Ecuador completed the survey from February 2021 to June 2021. The survey included the total number of children awaiting surgery and estimates for specific conditions. Respondents were also able to add additional procedures. Results: Public hospitals had longer wait times than private facilities. The median waitlist was 90 patients and the median wait time was 2 months for elective surgeries.Conclusion: Lengthy surgical wait times affect surgical access in LMICs. COVID-19 had been associated with surgical delays around the world, exacerbating existing surgical backlogs. Our results revealed significant delays for elective, urgent and emergent cases across Sub-Saharan Africa. Stakeholders should consider approaches to scale the limited surgical and perioperative resources in LMICs, create mitigation strategies for future pandemics, and establish ways to monitor waitlists on an ongoing basis.
- Published
- 2022
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