Essential Emergency Surgical Care in remote hilly districts of Karnali Province - A Cross-Sectional Survey

Authors

  • Praveen Kumar Giri Karnali Academy of Health Sciences
  • Prem Prasad Panta
  • Niresh Thapa

Keywords:

Surgical Care, Emergency service, Karnali Province

Abstract

Background: Remote hilly areas of Karnali province has one in all the very best burdens of surgically treatable conditions within the world and therefore, the highest unmet need. The first objective of our study was to gauge the capacity of first-referral health facilities in remote districts of Karnali province to perform basic surgical procedures. The aim was to assist in planning strategies for access to life-saving and disability-preventing surgical procedures.

Method: The screening Tool was Situational Analysis to Assess Emergency and Essential Surgical Care ,to spot the health facility’s capacity to perform basic surgical (including obstetrics and trauma) and anesthetic procedures by investigating four categories of data: human resources, infrastructure, equipment and interventions available. The tool interrogated the supply of eight sorts of care providers, 35 surgical interventions and 67 items of apparatus. Results: on the average, 72.83% of all admissions required either minor or major surgical interventions. Oxygen supplies, electrical power backup, running water, blood bank, hospital guidelines were inconsistent. Only 1 Hospital have trained Surgeons, Anesthesiologist and Obstetrician/Gynecologist. Only 1 hospital can perform around 97.1% of procedures.

Conclusion: The capacity for essential surgery is severely limited and provided limitations in basic equipment ,human resources, infrastructure, and supplies. 

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Published

2020-12-04

How to Cite

1.
Giri PK, Panta PP, Thapa N. Essential Emergency Surgical Care in remote hilly districts of Karnali Province - A Cross-Sectional Survey. Journal of Karnali Academy of Health Sciences [Internet]. 2020Dec.4 [cited 2024Oct.31];3(2):116-21. Available from: http://jkahs.org.np/jkahs/index.php/jkahs/article/view/181