The Pediatric Emergency Surgery Course: Impact on Provider Practice in Rural Uganda

Greg Klazura,Martin Situma, Edwin Musinguzi,Robert Mugarura,James Nyonyintono,Ava Yap,Caroline Q. Stephens,Sarah Ullrich,Nasser Kakembo,John Sekabira, Augustine Ssemeju, Max Bwesigye, Deborah Muzaki,Thomas Sims, Nalukenge Proscovia, Jennifer Mbambu, Doreen Kwikiriza, Franklin Arinda,Doruk Ozgediz,Phyllis Kisa

JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC SURGERY(2024)

引用 0|浏览14
暂无评分
摘要
Purpose The Pediatric Emergency Surgery Course (PESC) trains rural Ugandan providers to recognize and manage critical pediatric surgical conditions. 45 providers took PESC between 2018 and 2019. We sought to assess the impact of the course at three regional hospitals: Fort Portal, Kabale, and Kiwoko. Methods We conducted a retrospective cohort study. Diagnosis, procedure, and patient outcome data were collected twelve months before and after PESC from admission and theater logbooks. We also assessed referrals from these institutions to Uganda's two pediatric surgery hubs: Mulago and Mbarara Hospitals. Wilcoxon rank-sum and Pearson's chi-squared tests compared pre- and post-PESC measures. Interrupted time-series-analysis assessed referral volume before and after PESC. Results 1534 admissions and 2148 cases were documented across the three regional hospitals. Kiwoko made 539 referrals, while pediatric surgery hubs received 116 referrals. There was a statistically significant immediate increase in the number of referrals from Fort Portal, from 0.5 patients/month pre-PESC to 0.8 post-PESC (95 % CI 0.03-1.51). Moving averages of the combined number of pyloromyotomy, intussusception reductions, and hernia repairs at the rural hospitals also increased post-course. Neonatal time to referral and referred patient age were significantly lower after PESC delivery. Conclusion Our data suggest that PESC increased referrals to tertiary centers and operative volume of selected cases at rural hospitals and shortened time to presentation at sites receiving referrals. PESC is a locally-driven, validated, clinical education intervention that improves timely care of pediatric surgical emergencies and merits further support and dissemination. Type of Study Retrospective Cohort Study. Level of Evidence III.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Global health,Surgical education,Uganda,Rural,Emergency,Assessment
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要