Post-surgery
survival rates are lower across Africa despite patients undergoing "more
minor" operations. AFP
|
Patients undergoing
surgery in Africa are more than twice as likely to die following an operation
than the global average, researchers say.
BBC
News report continues:
But
they say the most worrying revelation was just how few Africans have access to
elective surgery - surgery that is scheduled in advance.
The
number of these operations is 20 times lower than the demand, the study in the Lancet medical journal says.
They
call the deficit a "silent killer".
Prof Bruce Biccard, a co-author of the study from the University of Cape Town, toldThe Guardian the main problem was a lack of medical staff and
facilities to spot complications after the surgery.
"[The
reason] that people do so terribly in Africa from a surgical point of view is
that there are just no human resources," he said.
Globally,
an average of 1% of patients die after surgery, but researchers say this number
rises to 2.1% for patients in Africa.
Post-surgery
survival rates are lower in Africa than the global average despite patients
there being younger and lower risk, the report says.
Patients
in Africa also mostly undergo surgery that is "more minor" and have
"fewer complications".
The
most common surgery is caesarean delivery, which accounts for 33% of
operations. Infection was the most common post-surgery complication,
researchers say.
It
was the largest study of its kind ever undertaken in Africa, analyzing data of
11,422 adult patients across in 25 countries - including Ethiopia, Nigeria,
Egypt and South Africa.
No
comparisons between those different African nations are available, however,
"because of lower-than-expected surgical volumes" researchers say.
This
study builds on the work of the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery which last year found 5 billion people around the world
don't have access to safe surgery.
In
sub-Saharan Africa, fewer than 1 in 10 people can get basic surgical care. But
even when they do, complication rates are much higher than other parts of the
world.
This
all comes down to weaker health systems, fewer medical staff, and patients not
having access to the full care they need. Having surgery isn't just about the
medical procedure, it's about aftercare.
Patients
should be properly monitored after surgery, but that can be very difficult with
families often living many miles from their nearest health centre, and
struggling to afford follow-up appointments.
Also,
as the authors themselves state, "increased surgery is important" but
"it is essential that these surgical treatments are safe and
effective".
If resources aren't available for safe surgery, complication rates - inevitably and unnecessarily - become higher.
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