Pediatric Surgery Collaboration in Uganda, the Benefits of Long Term Partnerships at Regional Referral Hospitals

Article Authors: Greg Klazura1, Peter Kayima2, Martin Situma3, Edwin Musinguzi4, Robert Mugarura5, James Nyonyintono6, Ava Yap7, James Cope8, Richard Akello9, Emmanuel Kiwanuka9, Moses Odonkara9, Chelsea Okellowange9, Jennifer Adongpiny9, Daniels Lakwanyero9, Patricia Atim9, Aber Patience Cadrine9, Joshua Olara9, Amulya Boppana1, Ruth Laverde7, Sergio d'Agostino10, Bruno Cigliano10 , Doruk Ozgediz7, Thomas Sims1, Phyllis Kisa2

Abstract


Abstract
Background: In 2022 there were only seven pediatric surgeons in Uganda, but approximately 170 are needed. Consequently, Ugandan general surgeons treat most pediatric surgical problems at regional hospitals. Accordingly, stakeholders created the Pediatric Emergency Surgery Course, which teaches rural providers identification, resuscitation, treatment and referral of pediatric surgical conditions. In order to improve course offerings and better understand pediatric surgery needs we collected admission and operative logbook data from four participating sites. One participating site, Lacor Hospital, rarely referred patients and had a much higher operative volume. Therefore, we sought to understand the causes of this difference and the resulting economic impact.
Methods: Over a four-year period, data was collected from logbooks at four different regional referral hospitals in Uganda. Patients < 18 years old with a surgical diagnosis were included. Patient LOS, referral volume, age, and case type were compared between sites and DALYs were calculated and converted into monetary benefit.
Results: Over four sites, 8,615 admissions, and 5,457 cases were included. Lacor patients were younger, had a longer length of stay, and were referred less. Additionally, Lacor’s long-term partnerships with a high-income country institution, a missionary organization, and visiting Ugandan and international pediatric surgeons were unique. In 2018, the pediatric surgery case volume was: Lacor (967); Fort Portal (477); Kiwoko (393); and Kabale (153), resulting in a substantial difference in long-term monetary health benefit.
Conclusion: Long-term international partnerships may advance investments in surgical infrastructure, workforce, and education in low- and middle-income countries. This collaborative model allows stakeholders to make a greater impact than any single institution could make alone.

Bibliographical metadata

Journal Research Square
Volume 1
DOI https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-4332253/v1
License CC BY 4.0 License
Links https://assets-eu.researchsquare.com/files/rs-4332253/v1/4e380dcb-969c-4319-966f-bdae3dffbbcb.pdf?c=1744206845
Related Faculties/Schools
Affiliation

University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System,

Mulago Hospital,

Mbarara National Referral Hospital,

Fort Portal Hospital,

Kabale Hospital,

Kiwoko Hospital,

Center for Health Equity in Surgery and Anaesthesia, University of California,

UNSW Sydney,

St. Mary’s Hospital Lacor,

10 Surgery for Children