Development of a surgical capacity index: Opportunities for assessment and improvement Journal Article


Authors: Kwon, S.; Kingham, T. P.; Kamara, T. B.; Sherman, L.; Natuzzi, E.; Mock, C.; Kushner, A.
Article Title: Development of a surgical capacity index: Opportunities for assessment and improvement
Abstract: Background: Significant gaps exist in the provision of surgical care in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The purpose of this study was to develop a metric to monitor surgical capacity in LMICs. Methods: The World Health Organization developed a survey called the Tool for Situational Analysis to Assess Emergency and Essential Surgical Care. Using this tool, we developed a surgical capacity scoring index and assessed its usefulness with data from Sierra Leone, Liberia, and the Solomon Islands. Results: There were data from 10 hospitals in Sierra Leone, 16 hospitals in Liberia, and 9 hospitals in the Solomon Islands. The levels of surgical capacity were created using our scoring index based on a possible 100 points: level 1 for hospitals with <50 points, level 2 with 50-70 points, level 3 with 70-80 points, and level 4 with >80 points. In Sierra Leone, 44% of the hospitals had a surgical capacity rating of level 1, 50% level 2, and 10% level 3. In Liberia, 37.5% of the hospitals had a surgical capacity rating of level 1, 56.3% level 2, and only one hospital level 3. For Sierra Leone and Liberia, two factors-infrastructure and personnel-had the greatest deficits. In the Solomon Islands, 44.4% of the hospitals had their surgical capacity rated at level 1, 22.2% at level 2, 11.1% at level 3, and 22.2% at level 4. Conclusions: Pending pilot testing for reliability and validity, it appears that a systematic hospital surgical capacity index can identify areas for improvement and provide an objective measure for monitoring changes over time. © 2011 Société Internationale de Chirurgie.
Journal Title: World Journal of Surgery
Volume: 36
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0364-2313
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2012-02-01
Start Page: 232
End Page: 239
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s00268-011-1385-z
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 22173592
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 2 April 2012" - "CODEN: WJSUD" - "Source: Scopus"
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. T Peter Kingham
    609 Kingham