TY - JOUR
T1 - Access to and quality of elective care
T2 - a prospective cohort study using hernia surgery as a tracer condition in 83 countries
AU - NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Global Surgery
AU - Dönmez, A. Eylül
AU - Goswami, Aakansha Giri
AU - Raheja, Aashna
AU - Bhadani, Aayush
AU - El Kady, Abd Elrahman Safwat
AU - Alniemi, Abdalaziz
AU - Awad, Abdalkarim
AU - Aladl, Abdalla
AU - Younis, Abdalla
AU - Alwali, Abdallah
AU - Khalil, Abdallah
AU - Mansour, Abdallah
AU - Elkhouly, Abdallah Mohamed
AU - Rashad Temerik, Abdallah
AU - Hasan, Abdallatef
AU - Chied, Abdelhafid
AU - Abdraba, Abdelhamid
AU - Hrora, Abdelmalek
AU - Abdelshafi, Abdelrahman
AU - Alwali, Abdelrahman
AU - Maraqa, Abdelrahman
AU - Ghaffar, Abdul
AU - Chekfa, Abdul Jabar
AU - Al Balushi, Abdul Majeed
AU - Quddus, Abdul
AU - Hammadieh, Abdul Rahman
AU - Muntaka, Abdul Jalilu Mohammed
AU - Asekun, Abdulazeez
AU - Alshahrani, Abdulaziz
AU - Jowharji, Abdulaziz
AU - Alshukre, Abdulbaset
AU - Khair Etareig, Abdulhafid
AU - Abubakar Abdulkarim, Abdulhafiz
AU - Ashiru, Abdulhafiz
AU - Alailesh, Abdulhamid
AU - Al-Mallah, Abdullah
AU - Baydoun, Abdullah
AU - Chaudhry, Abdullah
AU - Askin, Abdullah Emre
AU - Almutairi, Abdulmjeed
AU - Belkhair, Abdulmunem
AU - Abdllah, Abdulrahman
AU - Alhammali, Abdulrahman
AU - Basalim, Abdulrahman
AU - Abouelnagah, Abdulrahman Galal Mohamed Mostafa
AU - Ghazal, Abdulrahman
AU - Mohammed, Abdulrahman
AU - Qasem, Abdulrahman
AU - Anadani, Abdulrazak
AU - Jimoh, Abdulrazaq
AU - Lawal, Abdulrazzaq Oluwagbemiga
AU - Khaity, Abdulrhman
AU - Lawal, Abdulwahab
AU - Elzoubi, Abdurrahim Esseid
AU - Sheshe, Abdurrahman Abba
AU - Cetişli, Abdurrahman Furkan
AU - Oyedele, Abeeb
AU - Aljahdali, Abeer
AU - Aboelnasr, Abeer Gamal Elsyed
AU - Demessie, Abel
AU - Bhargava, Abhilasha
AU - Sonkar, Abhinav Arun
AU - Bavaharan, Abhirame
AU - Khan, Abid
AU - Campbell, Abigail
AU - Oyelekan, Abimbola Adeola Akintunde
AU - Okunlola, Abiodun Idowu
AU - Ojewuyi, Abiodun
AU - Ekerin, Abiola
AU - Saleh, Abobakr
AU - Khairy, Abouelatta
AU - Muthunayagam, Abraham Benjamin
AU - Botha, Abraham
AU - Teshome Sahilemariam, Abraham
AU - Nawawi, Abrar
AU - Muhammad, Abubakar Bala
AU - Dahiru, Abubakar
AU - Yahaya, Abubakar
AU - Abdelmalik, Abubaker
AU - Anuar, Abul Akmal Arif
AU - Ousseini, Adakal
AU - Leon -Del- Angel, Adalberto
AU - Frankel, Adam
AU - Gyedu, Adam
AU - Lim, Adam
AU - Lukáč, Adam
AU - Peckham-Cooper, Adam
AU - Sabbah, Adam
AU - Varga, Adam
AU - Sanou, Adama
AU - Issaka, Adamu
AU - Ningi, Adamu
AU - Yeshitila, Addis
AU - Yingess, Addisu
AU - Olugbami, Adebayo, Moses
AU - Damola-Okesiji, Adebola
AU - Lawal, Adedayo
AU - Ojo, Adedoyin
AU - Hashmi, Adeel
AU - Fakoya, Adegbolahan
AU - Ishola, Adegoke
AU - Abiodun, Adekunle
AU - Ajayi, Adekunle
AU - Mouffokes, Adel
AU - Bonelli, Adele
AU - Adekoya, Adeleke
AU - Akeem Aderogba, Adeleke
AU - Özcan, Adem
AU - Ayoade, Ademidun
AU - Adeyeye, Ademola
AU - Agbaje, Ademola
AU - Talabi, Ademola
AU - Ademuyiwa, Adesoji O.
AU - Adewumiya, Adesoji
AU - Ademuyiwa, Adesoji O.
AU - Aderounmu, Adewale
AU - Adisa, Adewale
AU - Oke, Adewale
AU - Ragab, Adham
AU - Alzadjali, Adil
AU - Baksi, Aditya
AU - Jayapalan, Aditya
AU - Md Yunos, Adnan
AU - Pisanu, Adolfo
AU - Salazar, Adolfo
AU - Salinas Barragan, Adrian Alberto
AU - Fox, Adrian
AU - Stollberg, Adrian
AU - Franco, Adriana
AU - Neves, Adriana
AU - Vricheva, Adriana
AU - Hodonou, Adrien Montcho
AU - Aghayeva, Afag
AU - Liaquat, Affifa
AU - Alsultan, Afnan
AU - Morad, Afnan
AU - Kalidis, Afroditi Angella
AU - Gkouniaroudi, Agathi
AU - Karakosta, Agathi
AU - Lovi, Agbenya
AU - Yevide, Agossou Barthélémy
AU - Duro, Agustin
AU - Rodriguez Gonzalez, Agustin
AU - Tariq, Ahbala
AU - Abaidalla, Ahmad
AU - Abuhammad, Ahmad
AU - Abuhantash, Ahmad
AU - Mansour, Ahmad Adel
AU - Ahmad Zaidi, Ahmad Al Hafeez
AU - Alahmad Alismael, Ahmad
AU - Alayed, Ahmad
AU - Alfarwan, Ahmad
AU - Alhaj, Ahmad
AU - Ali, Ahmad
AU - Alroobi, Ahmad
AU - Alsheikh, Ahmad
AU - Alusef, Ahmad
AU - Alzu'Bi, Ahmad
AU - Kayali, Ahmad Amir
AU - Bouhuwaish, Ahmad
AU - Doghaim, Ahmad
AU - El-Sherbiney, Ahmad
AU - Ghazal, Ahmad
AU - Ramly, Ahmad Nasir
AU - Raza, Ahmad
AU - Qureshi, Ahmad Uzair
AU - Arnaout, Ahmad Yamen
AU - Abdelhamid, Ahmed
AU - Abuthaher, Ahmed
AU - Adel, Ahmed
AU - Ahmayda, Ahmed
AU - Al-Mouahhed, Ahmed
AU - Alagha, Ahmed
AU - Albalawi, Ahmed
AU - Albhaisi, Ahmed
AU - Alrifaee, Ahmed
AU - Azam, Ahmed
AU - Barakat, Ahmed
AU - Al-Hajjaj, Ahmed Basim Abed
AU - Dawoud, Ahmed
AU - El Shamarka, Ahmed
AU - El-Bastwesy, Ahmed
AU - Elghrieb, Ahmed
AU - Elkhalifa, Ahmed
AU - Elmosalamy, Ahmed
AU - Elshazli Mahmoud, Ahmed
AU - Montaser, Ahmed G.
AU - Gbeadese, Ahmed
AU - Haty, Ahmed
AU - K. Ali, Ahmed
AU - Awad, Ahmed K.
AU - Kedwany, Ahmed
AU - Khalleefah, Ahmed
AU - Abbas, Ahmed M.
AU - Allam, Ahmed M.
AU - Maher, Ahmed
AU - Elsayed, Ahmed Mohamed
AU - Mohamed Ibrahim Mohamed, Ahmed
AU - Mostafa, Ahmed
AU - Nabil, Ahmed
AU - Nada, Ahmed
AU - Ragheb, Ahmed
AU - Abdelrahman, Ahmed Saber Mohamed
AU - Sabry, Ahmed
AU - Sakr, Ahmed
AU - Elkhodary, Ahmed Salah
AU - Shaheen, Ahmed
AU - Ammar, Ahmed Siddique
AU - Hameed, Ahmer
AU - Akmercan, Ahmet
AU - Aslan, Ahmet
AU - Barcin, Ahmet
AU - Ciftci, Ahmet Burak
AU - Bozkurt, Ahmet Çağlar
AU - Sarı, Ahmet Can
AU - Yaşar, Ahmet Can
AU - Develioğlu, Ahmet
AU - Öztürk, Ahmet Mücteba
AU - Sanli, Ahmet Necati
AU - Rencuzogullari, Ahmet
AU - Yildiz, Ahmet
AU - Kaan, Ahmet Zahit
AU - Toi, Ahouefa Chourika Sakinath
AU - Aljamoudi, Aida
AU - Cheung, Aiden Chak Kei
AU - Gkoutoula, Aikaterini
AU - Kalogeropoulou, Aikaterini
AU - Sarafi, Aikaterini
AU - Abo Al Shamat, Aiman
AU - Sanon, Aimé Serge Titianma
AU - Sanon, Aimée Florence
AU - Hiller, Aimée
AU - Costas-Chavarri, Ainhoa
AU - Lombardero, Ainhoa
AU - Fraile, Ainoa
AU - Bojazyah, Aisha
AU - Kamal, Aisha
AU - Gill, Aisling
AU - Hada, Aïssatou
AU - Gulla, Aiste
AU - Mačiulaitytė, Aistė
AU - Sukumar, Aiswarya
AU - Landaluce-Olavarria, Aitor
AU - Sainz Lete, Aitor
AU - Pal, Ajay Kumar
AU - Malik, Ajaz Ahmad
AU - Horiguchi, Akihiko
AU - Kocaay, Akin Firat
AU - Fosh, Beverley
AU - Wichmann, Matthias
PY - 2024/7
Y1 - 2024/7
N2 - Background: Timely and safe elective health care facilitates return to normal activities for patients and prevents emergency admissions. Surgery is a cornerstone of elective care and relies on complex pathways. This study aimed to take a whole-system approach to evaluating access to and quality of elective health care globally, using inguinal hernia as a tracer condition. Methods: This was a prospective, international, cohort study conducted between Jan 30 and May 21, 2023, in which any hospital performing inguinal hernia repairs was eligible to take part. Consecutive patients of any age undergoing primary inguinal hernia repair were included. A measurement set mapped to the attributes of WHO's Health System Building Blocks was defined to evaluate access (emergency surgery rates, bowel resection rates, and waiting times) and quality (mesh use, day-case rates, and postoperative complications). These were compared across World Bank income groups (high-income, upper-middle-income, lower-middle-income, and low-income countries), adjusted for hospital and country. Factors associated with postoperative complications were explored with a three-level multilevel logistic regression model. Findings: 18 058 patients from 640 hospitals in 83 countries were included, of whom 1287 (7·1%) underwent emergency surgery. Emergency surgery rates increased from high-income to low-income countries (6·8%, 9·7%, 11·4%, 14·2%), accompanied by an increase in bowel resection rates (1·2%, 1·4%, 2·3%, 4·2%). Overall waiting times for elective surgery were similar around the world (median 8·0 months from symptoms to surgery), largely because of delays between symptom onset and diagnosis rather than waiting for treatment. In 14 768 elective operations in adults, mesh use decreased from high-income to low-income countries (97·6%, 94·3%, 80·6%, 61·0%). In patients eligible for day-case surgery (n=12 658), day-case rates were low and variable (50·0%, 38·0%, 42·1%, 44·5%). Complications occurred in 2415 (13·4%) of 18 018 patients and were more common after emergency surgery (adjusted odds ratio 2·06, 95% CI 1·72–2·46) and bowel resection (1·85, 1·31–2·63), and less common after day-case surgery (0·39, 0·34–0·44). Interpretation: This study demonstrates that elective health care is essential to preventing over-reliance on emergency systems. We identified actionable targets for system strengthening: clear referral pathways and increasing mesh repair in lower-income settings, and boosting day-case surgery in all income settings. These measures might strengthen non-surgical pathways too, reducing the burden on society and health services. Funding: NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Global Surgery and Portuguese Hernia and Abdominal Wall Society (Sociedade Portuguesa de Hernia e Parede Abdominal).
AB - Background: Timely and safe elective health care facilitates return to normal activities for patients and prevents emergency admissions. Surgery is a cornerstone of elective care and relies on complex pathways. This study aimed to take a whole-system approach to evaluating access to and quality of elective health care globally, using inguinal hernia as a tracer condition. Methods: This was a prospective, international, cohort study conducted between Jan 30 and May 21, 2023, in which any hospital performing inguinal hernia repairs was eligible to take part. Consecutive patients of any age undergoing primary inguinal hernia repair were included. A measurement set mapped to the attributes of WHO's Health System Building Blocks was defined to evaluate access (emergency surgery rates, bowel resection rates, and waiting times) and quality (mesh use, day-case rates, and postoperative complications). These were compared across World Bank income groups (high-income, upper-middle-income, lower-middle-income, and low-income countries), adjusted for hospital and country. Factors associated with postoperative complications were explored with a three-level multilevel logistic regression model. Findings: 18 058 patients from 640 hospitals in 83 countries were included, of whom 1287 (7·1%) underwent emergency surgery. Emergency surgery rates increased from high-income to low-income countries (6·8%, 9·7%, 11·4%, 14·2%), accompanied by an increase in bowel resection rates (1·2%, 1·4%, 2·3%, 4·2%). Overall waiting times for elective surgery were similar around the world (median 8·0 months from symptoms to surgery), largely because of delays between symptom onset and diagnosis rather than waiting for treatment. In 14 768 elective operations in adults, mesh use decreased from high-income to low-income countries (97·6%, 94·3%, 80·6%, 61·0%). In patients eligible for day-case surgery (n=12 658), day-case rates were low and variable (50·0%, 38·0%, 42·1%, 44·5%). Complications occurred in 2415 (13·4%) of 18 018 patients and were more common after emergency surgery (adjusted odds ratio 2·06, 95% CI 1·72–2·46) and bowel resection (1·85, 1·31–2·63), and less common after day-case surgery (0·39, 0·34–0·44). Interpretation: This study demonstrates that elective health care is essential to preventing over-reliance on emergency systems. We identified actionable targets for system strengthening: clear referral pathways and increasing mesh repair in lower-income settings, and boosting day-case surgery in all income settings. These measures might strengthen non-surgical pathways too, reducing the burden on society and health services. Funding: NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Global Surgery and Portuguese Hernia and Abdominal Wall Society (Sociedade Portuguesa de Hernia e Parede Abdominal).
KW - elective health care
KW - elective care
KW - hernia surgery
KW - tracer conditions
KW - inguinal hernia
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85195427180&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S2214-109X(24)00142-6
DO - 10.1016/S2214-109X(24)00142-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 38797188
AN - SCOPUS:85195427180
SN - 2572-116X
VL - 12
SP - e1094-e1103
JO - The Lancet Global Health
JF - The Lancet Global Health
IS - 7
ER -