LC can be performed safely even in non-teaching rural hospitals of a developing country provided proper equipment is available and the surgeons and other team members are well trained in the procedure. It is stressed that IOC is not essential to prevent biliary tract injuries and missed CBD stones. The costs to the patient and the hospital can be minimized by using reusable instruments, intracorporeal sutures, and condoms instead of titanium clips and endobags.
Training in minimal access surgery has always been difficult in developing countries with limited resources, non availability of formal animal labs, inaffordability of conventional endotrainers and lack of trained endosurgeons to help the amateurs. It is always difficult to start a new procedure in such places where not only the patients but the orthodox surgical fraternity are reluctant to accept new ideas and newer trends in surgery. After thorough discussions with senior surgeons, the author (who was the only trained endosurgeon to begin with) developed a training policy to train the surgeons over a period of time through various exercises before allowing them to assist him in the actual surgeries. A homemade, inexpensive endotrainer was designed for these exercises. Audio-visual seminars were held in between the training sessions. This training module can be employed by other rural hospitals to improve the skills of surgeons who are new to the art of endosurgery.
This study evaluates the feasibility of performing laparoscopic cholecystectomy in order to reduce the expenditure in a 28-bed sub-district hospital in Kashmir, India. We report on a prospective clinical trail involving patients with gall bladder disease reported to the hospital from June 2005 till May 2007.
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