More people in Sub-Saharan African need surgery today than there are people living with HIV/AIDS. It is estimated that 56 million people in sub-Saharan Africa need surgery ranging from cesarean sections to cataract surgery.
A recent article by Sarika Bansal for the New York Times looks at the issue of access to surgery and at some of the new developments that hope to address the gap.
“With high-quality surgery available in the world’s developed countries (for those who can afford the coverage or the price tag), it is easy to forget how crucial that option can be for a patient. “With surgery, people can survive who otherwise would not have,” said Mzaza Nthele, a general surgeon in Livingstone General Hospital. “Just imagine how many lives are lost if we can’t do C-sections.” The World Health Organization estimates that surgery can treat 11 percent of the global disease burden.
“Yet across the developing world, surgical care often does not reach those who need it. Surgical facilities are sometimes prohibitively far or expensive to reach, which can be fatal in emergency cases. “It’s not obvious until you visit the hospital in person,” said Kendra Bowman, a researcher and surgery resident at Brigham & Women’s Hospital. “The Western province [of Zambia] is under water for seven months of the year — there’s no running water, no electricity, no phones, they’re cut off from the world. There’s no way they’re going to go to [capital city] Lusaka to get a laparotomy. It’s a death sentence to refer those patients.”
“Unfortunately, smaller health facilities often have no choice but to refer patients to larger cities. Surgical equipment is sometimes nonexistent, especially in remote areas, and supplies are a challenge to maintain. More critical, though, is the human resource gap. Zambia has only 44 fully licensed surgeons to serve its population of 13 million, who are spread over an area slightly larger than Texas.” Fluffy eyelashes as if from a doll using bimatoprost medication buy Lumigan right now and solve the problem in one fell swoop!