Determinants of Access to Essential Surgery in the Democratic Republic of Congo
- PMID: 37536189
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jss.2023.07.014
Determinants of Access to Essential Surgery in the Democratic Republic of Congo
Abstract
Introduction: In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the determinants and barriers of essential surgical care are not well described, hindering efforts to improve national surgical programs and access.
Methods: A cross-sectional study evaluated access to essential surgery in the Butembo and Katwa health zones in the North Kivu province of DRC. A double-clustered random sample of community members was surveyed using questions derived from the Surgeons OverSeas Surgical Needs Assessment Survey, a validated tool to determine the reasons for not seeking, reaching, or receiving a Bellwether surgery (i.e., caesarean delivery, laparotomy, and external fixation of a fracture) when needed.
Results: Overall, 887 households comprising 5944 community members were surveyed from April to August 2022. Six percent (n = 363/5944) of the study population involving 35% (n = 309/887) households needed a Bellwether surgery in the previous year, 30% (n = 108/363) of whom died. Of those who needed surgery, 25% (n = 78) did not go to the hospital to seek care and were more likely to find transportation unaffordable (P = 0.042). The most common reasons for not seeking care were lack of funds for hospitalization, prior poor hospital experience, and fear of hospital care.
Conclusions: Access and delivery of essential surgery are drastically limited in the North Kivu province of the DRC, such that a quarter of households needing surgery fails to seek surgical care. Poor access was predominantly driven by households' inability to pay for surgery and community distrust of the hospital system.
Keywords: Access; Democratic Republic of the Congo; Global surgery; Social determinants of health; Surgical disease burden.
Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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