Evaluation of Surgical Care in El Salvador Using the WHO Surgical Vital Statistics
- 23 March 2013
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in World Journal of Surgery
- Vol. 37 (6), 1227-1235
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00268-013-1990-0
Abstract
Vital statistics to assess surgical care worldwide have been published by the World Health Organization. These data have not been reported for any Latin American country. We sought to measure these metrics as a starting point for understanding how to improve the safety of surgery in El Salvador. We designed an institutional survey that was sent to 21 hospitals and used national administrative data sources to estimate the number of surgeons, anesthesia professionals, operating rooms, and annual surgical volume for El Salvador. We reviewed surgical and death logs for 12 Ministry of Health hospitals to calculate day-of-surgery and postoperative in-hospital mortality ratios for a 6-month period (October 2009–March 2010). We estimate there to be 1,222 surgeons [95 % confidence interval (CI) 1,137–1,307], 539 anesthesia providers, 168 operating rooms (95 % CI 136–199), and 172,972 operations (95 % CI 171,961–173,983) annually in El Salvador. There were on average 1,197 annual cases per operating room and 436 annual cases per surgeon in the 21 hospitals we studied. The day-of-surgery mortality ratio was 0.42 % (95 % CI 0.35–0.5), whereas the postoperative in-hospital mortality ratio was 1.58 % (95 % CI 1.44–1.72). The postoperative in-hospital mortality ratio was higher for hospitals with a greater number of hospital beds (p = 0.01) and operating rooms (p = 0.02). Despite the challenges that El Salvador faces to provide surgical care, national collection of surgical vital statistics is feasible. Collection of additional process and outcome measures may be insightful for improving the surgical safety in El Salvador and elsewhere.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rates and patterns of death after surgery in the United States, 1996 and 2006Surgery, 2011
- Improving Surgical Care in Low‐ and Middle‐Income Countries: A Pivotal Role for the World Health OrganizationWorld Journal of Surgery, 2009
- Key Concepts for Estimating the Burden of Surgical Conditions and the Unmet Need for Surgical CareWorld Journal of Surgery, 2009
- Staffing the Operating Room Suite: Perspectives from Europe and North America on the Role of Different Anesthesia PersonnelAnesthesiology Clinics, 2008
- Population Health Metrics for Surgery: Effective Coverage of Surgical Services in Low‐Income and Middle‐Income CountriesWorld Journal of Surgery, 2008
- The burden of surgical conditions and access to surgical care in low- and middle-income countriesPublished by WHO Press ,2008
- The “Other” Neglected Diseases in Global Public Health: Surgical Conditions in Sub-Saharan AfricaPLoS Medicine, 2008
- Increasing Access to Surgical Services for the Poor in Rural Haiti: Surgery as a Public Good for Public HealthWorld Journal of Surgery, 2008
- Anaesthesia services in developing countries: defining the problemsAnaesthesia, 2006
- Extra-Binomial Variation in Logistic Linear ModelsJournal of the Royal Statistical Society Series C: Applied Statistics, 1982