APA
Estaire Gómez, Mercedes & NIHR Global Health Unit on Global Surgery & COVIDSurg Collaborative (2022-11 ) .Elective surgery system strengthening: development, measurement, and validation of the surgical preparedness index across 1632 hospitals in 119 countries.
ISO 690
Estaire Gómez, Mercedes & NIHR Global Health Unit on Global Surgery & COVIDSurg Collaborative. 2022-11 .Elective surgery system strengthening: development, measurement, and validation of the surgical preparedness index across 1632 hospitals in 119 countries.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/39622
Resumen:
Background The 2015 Lancet Commission on global surgery identified surgery and anaesthesia as indispensable parts
of holistic health-care systems. However, COVID-19 exposed the fragility of planned surgical services around the
world, which have also been neglected in pandemic recovery planning. This study aimed to develop and validate a
novel index to support local elective surgical system strengthening and address growing backlogs.
Methods First, we performed an international consultation through a four-stage consensus process to develop a
multidomain index for hospital-level assessment (surgical preparedness index; SPI). Second, we measured surgical
preparedness across a global network of hospitals in high-income countries (HICs), middle-income countries (MICs),
and low-income countries (LICs) to explore the distribution of the SPI at national, subnational, and hospital levels.
Finally, using COVID-19 as an example of an external system shock, we compared hospitals¿ SPI to their planned surgical
volume ratio (SVR; ie, operations for which the decision for surgery was made before hospital admission), calculated as
the ratio of the observed surgical volume over a 1-month assessment period between June 6 and Aug 5, 2021, against the
expected surgical volume based on hospital administrative data from the same period in 2019 (ie, a pre-pandemic
baseline). A linear mixed-effects regression model was used to determine the effect of increasing SPI score.
Findings In the first phase, from a longlist of 103 candidate indicators, 23 were prioritised as core indicators of elective
surgical system preparedness by 69 clinicians (23 [33%] women; 46 [67%] men; 41 from HICs, 22 from MICs, and six
from LICs) from 32 countries. The multidomain SPI included 11 indicators on facilities and consumables, two on
staffing, two on prioritisation, and eight on systems. Hospitals were scored from 23 (least prepared) to 115 points
(most prepared). In the second phase, surgical preparedness was measured in 1632 hospitals by 4714 clinicians from
119 countries. 745 (45·6%) of 1632 hospitals were in MICs or LICs. The mean SPI score was 84·5 (95% CI 84·1¿84·9),
which varied between HIC (88·5 [89·0¿88·0]), MIC (81·8 [82·5¿81·1]), and LIC (66·8 [64·9¿68·7]) settings. In the
third phase, 1217 (74·6%) hospitals did not maintain their expected SVR during the COVID-19 pandemic, of which
625 (51·4%) were from HIC, 538 (44·2%) from MIC, and 54 (4·4%) from LIC settings. In the mixed-effects model, a
10-point increase in SPI corresponded to a 3·6% (95% CI 3·0¿4·1; p<0·0001) increase in SVR. This was consistent in
HIC (4·8% [4·1¿5·5]; p<0·0001), MIC (2·8 [2·0¿3·7]; p<0·0001), and LIC (3·8 [1·3¿6·7%]; p<0·0001) settings.
Interpretation The SPI contains 23 indicators that are globally applicable, relevant across different system stressors, vary
at a subnational level, and are collectable by front-line teams. In the case study of COVID-19, a higher SPI was associated
with an increased planned surgical volume ratio independent of country income status, COVID-19 burden, and hospital
type. Hospitals should perform annual self-assessment of their surgical preparedness to identify areas that can be
improved, create resilience in local surgical systems, and upscale capacity to address elective surgery backlogs.
Funding National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Global Health Research Unit on Global Surgery, NIHR
Academy, Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland, Bowel Research UK, British Association of
Surgical Oncology, British Gynaecological Cancer Society, and Medtronic.