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Identifying knowledge needed to improve surgical care in Southern Africa using a theory of change approach

Authors :
Edward Clune
Moneimang Makgasa
Kathryn M. Chu
Sean Chetty
Theresia Shivera
Godfrey I. Muguti
Susan Levine
Shingai Nyaguse
Maria Lisa Odland
Savannah S. Verhage
Shrikant M Peters
Liesl de Waard
Lucia D'Ambruoso
Megan Naidoo
Tamlyn Mac Quene
Margaret J. Tarpley
Akutu Munyika
Danyca Shadé Breedt
Justine Davies
Rowan Duys
Jacob Sheehama
Balisi Bakanisi
Ché L Reddy
Priyanka Naidu
John Tarpley
Salome Maswime
Kristin Groeneveld
Bruce M Biccard
Regan Boden
Source :
BMJ Global Health, Vol 6, Iss 6 (2021), BMJ Global Health
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

Surgical healthcare has been prioritised in the Southern African Development Community (SADC), a regional intergovernmental entity promoting equitable and sustainable economic growth and socioeconomic development. However, challenges remain in translating political prioritisation into effective and equitable surgical healthcare. The AfroSurg Collaborative (AfroSurg) includes clinicians, public health professionals and social scientists from six SADC countries; it was created to identify context-specific, critical areas where research is needed to inform evidence-grounded policy and implementation. In January 2020, 38 AfroSurg members participated in a theory of change (ToC) workshop to agree on a vision: ‘An African-led, regional network to enable evidence-based, context-specific, safe surgical care, which is accessible, timely, and affordable for all, capturing the spirit of Ubuntu[1]’ and to identify necessary policy and service-delivery knowledge needs to achieve this vision. A unified ToC map was created, and a Delphi survey was conducted to rank the top five priority knowledge needs. In total, 45 knowledge needs were identified; the top five priority areas included (1) mapping of available surgical services, resources and providers; (2) quantifying the burden of surgical disease; (3) identifying the appropriate number of trainees; (4) identifying the type of information that should be collected to inform service planning; and (5) identifying effective strategies that encourage geographical retention of practitioners. Of the top five knowledge needs, four were policy-related, suggesting a dearth of much-needed information to develop regional, evidenced-based surgical policies. The findings from this workshop provide a roadmap to drive locally led research and create a collaborative network for implementing research and interventions. This process could inform discussions in other low-resource settings and enable more evidenced-based surgical policy and service delivery across the SADC countries and beyond.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20597908
Volume :
6
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Global Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e0c4ad17f85a339301942bfdf8e80d50