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Building safe surgery knowledge and capacity in Cambodia: a mixed-methods evaluation of an innovative training and mentorship intervention.

Authors :
Bari, Sehrish
Incorvia, Joseph
Ahearn, Olivia
Dara, Lem
Sharma, Swati
Varallo, John
Smith, Victoria
Cainer, Monica
Samphy, Cheav
Rathamony, Kith
Kanora, Ngin
Dara, Vithiea
Meara, John G
Koy, Virya
Alidina, Shehnaz
Source :
Global Health Action; 2021, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p1-11, 11p, 1 Diagram, 4 Charts
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Working in partnership with the Cambodian Ministry of Health, the Safe Surgery 2020 initiative (SS2020) supports the prioritization of surgery and mobilization of resources to target limited workforce capacity. An evaluation study was conducted to assess the impact of SS2020 on intervention hospitals in Cambodia. To understand the impact of the SS2020 program on intervention hospitals in Cambodia by assessing the changes in key surgical performance indicators before and after the intervention, identifying key barriers and facilitators to adoption of learnings, and discovering lessons on the uptake and diffusion of this initiative in Cambodia and other similar contexts. This study is a convergent mixed-methods evaluation of a one-year multicomponent SS2020 intervention. Surgical observations were conducted in 8 intervention hospitals at baseline and endline to evaluate pre and post adherence to 20 safety, teamwork, and communication items. Fifteen focus groups were conducted in all intervention sites at endline to assess key facilitators and barriers to positive impact. There was significant improvement in 19 of 20 indicators assessed during surgical observations. Among the highest performing indicators were safety items; among the lowest were communication items. Participants self-reported improved knowledge and positive behavior change after the intervention. Institutional change and direct patient impact were not widely reported. Most participants had favorable views of the mentorship model and were eager for the program to continue implementation. The results provide evidence that change in surgical ecosystems can be achieved on a short timeline with limited resources. The hub-and-spoke mentorship model can be successful in improving knowledge and changing behavior in surgical safety. Workforce development is important to improving surgical systems, but greater financial and human resources are needed. Ministry support in adopting, leading, and scaling is crucial to the continued success of safe surgery interventions in Cambodia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16549716
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Global Health Action
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154569702
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2021.1998996