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. 2024 May 29:48:29.
doi: 10.11604/pamj.2024.48.29.41286. eCollection 2024.

Systems issues limiting acute fracture care delivery at a tertiary care hospital in Northern Tanzania

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Systems issues limiting acute fracture care delivery at a tertiary care hospital in Northern Tanzania

Papa Kwadwo Morgan-Asiedu et al. Pan Afr Med J. .

Abstract

Introduction: sub-Saharan Africa experiences a significant musculoskeletal trauma burden. Among patients who receive surgical treatment, there have been no reports as to how often surgical care is determined to be "adequate" or, if "inadequate", then what hospital and orthopaedic specialty-specific systems limitations might be prohibitive.

Methods: data from patients presenting to the orthopaedic trauma service at a tertiary care center in sub-Saharan Africa were prospectively collected over a 6-week period and then retrospectively reviewed to determine whether the surgical treatment was "adequate" (or otherwise, "inadequate") according to the principle of restoring length, alignment, and rotation. Exclusion criteria included insufficient clinical information; isolated spinal injury; infection; cases involving only removal of hardware; soft-tissue procedures; tumor cases; and medical (non-surgical) conditions.

Results: 112 cases were included for analysis. Surgery was indicated in 106 of 112 cases (94.6%), and of those, surgery was performed in 62 cases (58.4%). Among patients who underwent surgery with available post-operative imaging (n=56), surgical treatment was "inadequate" in 24 cases (42.9%). The most common reasons treatment was deemed "inadequate" included unavailability of appropriate implants (n=16), unavailability of intraoperative fluoroscopy (n=10) and incomplete intraoperative evaluation of injury (n=5).

Conclusion: several systems limitations prevent the delivery of adequate surgical treatment in patients with acute orthopaedic traumatic injuries, including lack of intraoperative fluoroscopy and lack of implant availability. This study will serve as a useful baseline for ongoing efforts seeking to improve orthopaedic specialty resource availability and facilitate more effective fracture care in this region.

Keywords: Orthopaedics; capacity building; fluoroscopy; fracture fixation; road traffic crash; trauma.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
flow diagram of study design and surgical outcomes
Figure 2
Figure 2
sample patients with inadequate treatment; A) unavailable implants: basicervical femoral neck fracture status-post excisional arthroplasty instead of open reduction internal fixation/total hip arthroplasty; B) incomplete injury evaluation: distal femur/midshaft fibular fracture without appropriate evaluation of ankle and syndesmosis; C) intraoperative fluoroscopy unavailable: postoperative radiographs of bimalleolar fracture demonstrate medial malleolar fragment not captured by k-wire

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