Age at Primary Cleft Lip Repair: A Potential Bellwether Indicator for Pediatric Surgery
- PMID: 34235039
- PMCID: PMC8225376
- DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000003657
Age at Primary Cleft Lip Repair: A Potential Bellwether Indicator for Pediatric Surgery
Abstract
The bellwether procedures described by the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery represent the ability to deliver adult surgical services after there is a clear and easily made diagnosis. There is a need for pediatric surgery bellwether indicators. A pediatric bellwether indicator would ideally be a routinely performed procedure, for a relatively common condition that, in itself, is rarely lethal at birth, but that should ideally be treated with surgery by a standard age. Additionally, the condition should be easy to diagnose, to minimize the confounding effects of delays or failures in diagnosis. In this study, we propose the age at primary cleft lip (CL) repair as a bellwether indicator for pediatric surgery.
Method: We reviewed the surgical records of 71,346 primary cleft surgery patients and ultimately studied age at CL repair in 40,179 patients from 73 countries, treated by Smile Train partners for 2019. Data from Smile Train's database were correlated with World Bank and WHO indicators.
Results: Countries with a higher average age at CL repair (delayed access to surgery) had higher maternal, infant, and child mortality rates as well as a greater risk of catastrophic health expenditure for surgery. There was also a negative correlation between delayed CL repair and specialist surgical workforce numbers, life expectancy, percentage of deliveries by C-section, total health expenditure per capita, and Lancet Commission on Global Surgery procedure rates.
Conclusion: These findings suggest that age at CL repair has potential to serve as a bellwether indicator for pediatric surgical capacity in Lower- and Middle-income Countries.
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of The American Society of Plastic Surgeons.
References
-
- Price R, Makasa E, Hollands M. Strengthening emergency and essential surgical care and anesthesia as a component of universal health coverage—addressing the public health gaps arising from lack of safe, affordable and accessible surgical and anesthetic services. World J Surg. 2015; 39:2115. - PubMed
-
- Roa L, Jumbam DT, Makasa E, et al. . Global surgery and the sustainable development goals. Br J Surg. 2019; 106:e44–e52 - PubMed
-
- LeBrun DG, Chackungal S, Chao TE, et al. . Prioritizing essential surgery and safe anesthesia for the post-2015 development agenda: operative capacities of 78 district hospitals in 7 low- and middle-income countries. Surgery. 2014; 155:365–373 - PubMed
-
- Jamison DT, Nugent R, Gelband H, et al. . Surgical interventions for congenital anomalies. In: Disease Control Priorities. 3rd ed. Washington, D.C.: International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank; 2015:129–149
-
- Dewan MC, Baticulon RE, Ravindran K, et al. . Pediatric neurosurgical bellwether procedures for infrastructure capacity building in hospitals and healthcare systems worldwide. Childs Nerv Syst. 2018; 34:1837–1846 - PubMed
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources