Introduction District hospitals are key to providing universal coverage of essential surgery and for strengthening surgical care in general. This audit set out to quantify the surgical output of all the district hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal Province (KZN) over a 6-month period to see whether district hospitals were delivering the surgical care they are expected to deliver. Results There were a total of 18,871 operations performed at 37 district hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal from July to December 2015. The number of operations per hospital varied widely between 2150 at a single large district hospital and 68 at a small district hospital, respectively. Surgical operations for obstetrical conditions made up by far the majority of operations at 57%, with gynecological operations making up the second highest at 15%. Only 12% of operations were for general surgical conditions. With regards to the bellwether procedures, 96.1% of these were cesarean sections, 2.1% were laparotomies and 1.8% were ORIFs. For almost all the 37 hospitals, the percentage of laparotomies and ORIFs performed was small to negligible, while the percentage of cesarean sections performed was high. The number of bellwether operations performed per 100,000 population was much higher than the number of general surgical or orthopedic operations performed, primarily because of the preponderance of cesarean sections conducted in each hospital. We observed a strong and significant positive correlation (?0.691, 95% CI ?0.538 to ?0.800, p \ 0.001) between increasing distance to nearest regional referral hospital and rate of laparotomies and ORIF procedures performed. Conclusions The surgical output of district hospitals in KZN is heavily skewed toward obstetrics and gynecology. Further work is required to understand the reasons for this, but the current data imply that district hospitals are not delivering surgical and orthopedic care at district hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal.
A worsening trend of critical shortages in senior health care workers across low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) in sub-Saharan Africa has been documented for decades. This is especially the case in Ethiopia that has severe shortage of mental health professionals. Consistent with the WHO recommended approach of task sharing for mental health care in LMICs, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), which is an empirically validated psychological intervention aimed at increasing psychological flexibility, may be delivered by trained laypersons who have a grassroots presence. In this paper, we discuss the need for and potential role of ACT to be delivered by health extension workers (HEWs) to address mental health care needs across Ethiopia. To this end, we also reviewed previous studies that have examined the effectiveness of ACT-based interventions in African countries including in Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Uganda, and South Africa. All studies revealed significant improvements of various mental health-related outcome measures such as decreased psychological distress and depressive symptoms, or increased subjective wellbeing and life satisfaction in the groups that received an ACT-based intervention. However, to date, there is no study that applied ACT in Ethiopia. Thus, more research is warranted to examine the effectiveness and, if proven successful, to scale up a task sharing approach of an ACT-based intervention being delivered by trained HEWs at a grassroots level, possibly paving the way for an innovative, sustainable mental health service in Ethiopia as well as other African LMICs.
Background Frequently, surgical intervention is needed to treat soft tissue sepsis (STS). Ideally, most STS should be managed at the lowest level of surgical care close to the patient's home and a well‐functioning surgical service will be able to deliver this safely and effectively. This study interrogates the burden of STS in the province of KwaZulu‐Natal and reviews at which level in the health system the operative management of STS is being dealt with. Methods This study describes the operations for soft tissue sepsis conducted at all regional and tertiary hospitals in KwaZulu‐Natal province for the period of 1 July to 31 December 2015. All procedures for soft tissue sepsis were identified for closer review. Results Between 1 June and 31 December 2015, a total 6302 soft tissue‐related procedures were performed in the regional and tertiary hospitals of KZN. The breakdown by anatomical region was as follows, 618 (9.8%) head and neck surgeries, 895 (14.2%) chest and back, 277 (4.4%) abdominal wall, 818 (13%) pelvis/perineal/buttock and 3070 (48.7%) extremity‐related surgeries. There were a further 815 (12.9%) soft tissue‐related procedures where the anatomical region was unspecified. Of the soft tissue procedures, 3943 (62.6%) were for the management of soft tissue sepsis. The anatomical regions involved included 316 (8%) head and neck, 485 (12.3%) chest and back, 194 (4.9%) abdominal wall, 589 (14.9%) pelvic, perineal and buttock, 2054 (52.1%) extremity and 365 unspecified operations. Peri‐anal sepsis contributed 315 (8%), breast sepsis contributed to 372 (9.4%) of all soft tissue sepsis and amputations of extremities 658 (16.7%) of septic soft tissue procedures. Conclusion There is a significant burden of soft tissue sepsis requiring surgical treatment each month at regional and tertiary hospitals in KZN. This is made up of breast sepsis, peri‐anal sepsis and diabetic foot sepsis. This burden is being managed at an inappropriate level of care.
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