98 results on '"Lars, Hagander"'
Search Results
2. Associations of hair cortisol concentrations with paediatric appendicitis
- Author
-
Johanna Gudjonsdottir, Michaela Runnäs, Lars Hagander, Elvar Theodorsson, and Martin Salö
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The pathogenesis of paediatric appendicitis is still an enigma. In recent years, it has become more evident that our inherent immunological responses affect the trajectory of the disease course. Long-term stress has an impact on our immune system; however, it is practically and ethically challenging to prospectively track blood measurements of cortisol-levels in asymptomatic children should an acute appendicitis episode develop. The aim of this case–control study was therefore to evaluate the effect of increased stress measured as historical imprints in hair (hair cortisol concentrations [HCC]), on the risk of developing appendicitis and complicated appendicitis. 51 children (aged
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An Evaluation of Serum IgE and Th2-Associated Interleukins in Children With Uncomplicated and Complicated Appendicitis
- Author
-
Johanna Gudjonsdottir, Bodil Roth, Gustav Lovén, Bodil Ohlsson, Lars Hagander, and Martin Salö
- Subjects
IgE ,Th2 ,interleukins ,children ,appendicitis ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
BackgroundThe pathogenesis of appendicitis is not understood completely and establishing a correct diagnosis can be clinically challenging. Previous investigations have shown an association between a T helper cell (Th)2-mediated inflammatory response, for example immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated allergy, and a decreased risk of complicated appendicitis. The present study aimed to evaluate differences in serum concentrations of IgE and Th2-associated interleukins (IL) in children with uncomplicated and complicated appendicitis.MethodA prospective study including children
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Systematic review of low-income and middle-income country perceptions of visiting surgical teams from high-income countries
- Author
-
Lars Hagander, Desmond T. Jumbam, Nobhojit Roy, Justina Seyi-Olajide, Omolara Williams, Lotta Velin, Emmanuel A. Ameh, Adam Lantz, and Alex Elobu
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Health-related quality of life and scar satisfaction in a cohort of children operated on for sacrococcygeal teratoma
- Author
-
Mette Hambraeus, Lars Hagander, Einar Arnbjörnsson, Anna Börjesson, and Pernilla Stenström
- Subjects
Sacrococcygeal teratoma ,Health-related quality of life ,Scar ,Children ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Aim The aims of this study were to evaluate health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in children with sacrococcygeal teratoma and to explore the effect of the scar on physical, emotional and behavioral aspects. Methods A cohort of children operated on for sacrococcygeal teratoma between 2000 and 2013 at Lund University Hospital, Sweden, and their parents were interviewed. HRQoL was evaluated with PedsQL, and scar satisfaction was estimated through Patient Observer Scar Assessment Score (POSA). Results All eligible children (n = 17) were included (100% response rate). Median age was 7.3 years (range 3.5–16.0). Mean total PedsQL score was 92.3 (range 72.0 to 99.0). Patients with comorbidity scored lower (87.5) than those without (95.0) (p 8 years. No children reported that they avoided situations due to the scar, and most (80% of children and 90% of parents) reported absent or only mild negative emotions when considering the scar. Conclusion Children with sacrococcygeal teratoma had a good overall HRQoL, but comorbidity reduced the outcome. A few children reported scar-related impact on physical, behavioral and emotional aspects.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Global surgery, obstetric, and anaesthesia indicator definitions and reporting: An Utstein consensus report.
- Author
-
Justine I Davies, Adrian W Gelb, Julian Gore-Booth, Janet Martin, Jannicke Mellin-Olsen, Christina Åkerman, Emmanuel A Ameh, Bruce M Biccard, Geir Sverre Braut, Kathryn M Chu, Miliard Derbew, Hege Langli Ersdal, Jose Miguel Guzman, Lars Hagander, Carolina Haylock-Loor, Hampus Holmer, Walter Johnson, Sabrina Juran, Nicolas J Kassebaum, Tore Laerdal, Andrew J M Leather, Michael S Lipnick, David Ljungman, Emmanuel M Makasa, John G Meara, Mark W Newton, Doris Østergaard, Teri Reynolds, Lauri J Romanzi, Vatshalan Santhirapala, Mark G Shrime, Kjetil Søreide, Margit Steinholt, Emi Suzuki, John E Varallo, Gerard H A Visser, David Watters, and Thomas G Weiser
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundIndicators to evaluate progress towards timely access to safe surgical, anaesthesia, and obstetric (SAO) care were proposed in 2015 by the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery. These aimed to capture access to surgery, surgical workforce, surgical volume, perioperative mortality rate, and catastrophic and impoverishing financial consequences of surgery. Despite being rapidly taken up by practitioners, data points from which to derive the indicators were not defined, limiting comparability across time or settings. We convened global experts to evaluate and explicitly define-for the first time-the indicators to improve comparability and support achievement of 2030 goals to improve access to safe affordable surgical and anaesthesia care globally.Methods and findingsThe Utstein process for developing and reporting guidelines through a consensus building process was followed. In-person discussions at a 2-day meeting were followed by an iterative process conducted by email and virtual group meetings until consensus was reached. The meeting was held between June 16 to 18, 2019; discussions continued until August 2020. Participants consisted of experts in surgery, anaesthesia, and obstetric care, data science, and health indicators from high-, middle-, and low-income countries. Considering each of the 6 indicators in turn, we refined overarching descriptions and agreed upon data points needed for construction of each indicator at current time (basic data points), and as each evolves over 2 to 5 (intermediate) and >5 year (full) time frames. We removed one of the original 6 indicators (one of 2 financial risk protection indicators was eliminated) and refined descriptions and defined data points required to construct the 5 remaining indicators: geospatial access, workforce, surgical volume, perioperative mortality, and catastrophic expenditure. A strength of the process was the number of people from global institutes and multilateral agencies involved in the collection and reporting of global health metrics; a limitation was the limited number of participants from low- or middle-income countries-who only made up 21% of the total attendees.ConclusionsTo track global progress towards timely access to quality SAO care, these indicators-at the basic level-should be implemented universally as soon as possible. Intermediate and full indicator sets should be achieved by all countries over time. Meanwhile, these evolutions can assist in the short term in developing national surgical plans and collecting more detailed data for research studies.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Catastrophic expenditure and impoverishment after caesarean section in Sierra Leone: An evaluation of the free health care initiative
- Author
-
Alex J. van Duinen, Josien Westendorp, Thomas Ashley, Lars Hagander, Hampus Holmer, Alimamy P. Koroma, Andrew J. M. Leather, Mark G. Shrime, Arne Wibe, and Håkon A. Bolkan
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Background Utilizing surgical services, including caesarean sections, can result in catastrophic expenditure and impoverishment. In 2010, Sierra Leone introduced the Free Health Care Initiative (FHCI), a national financial risk protection program for the most vulnerable groups. Aim of this study was to investigate catastrophic expenditure and impoverishment related to caesarean section in Sierra Leone and evaluate the impact of the FHCI. Methods Women who delivered by caesarean section in nine hospitals were followed up with home visits one month after surgery, and data on medical and non-medical expenditures were collected. Individual income was estimated based on household characteristics and used to determine catastrophic expenditure and impoverishment for each patient. The impact of the FHCI was assessed by comparing actual expenditure with counterfactual expenditures had the initiative not existed. Results For the 1146 patients in the study, the median expenditure was 23 (IQR 4; 56) international dollars (Int$). Patients in the poorest quintile spent a median Int$ 59 (IQR 28; 76), which was significantly more than patients in the richest quintile, who spent a median Int$ 17 (IQR 2; 38, pConclusion Many women in Sierra Leone face catastrophic expenditure related to caesarean section, mainly through food and travel expenses, and the poor are disproportionally affected. The FHCI is effective in reducing the risk of catastrophic expenditure related to caesarean section, but many patients are still exposed to financial hardship, suggesting that additional support is needed for Sierra Leone’s poorest patients.
- Published
- 2021
8. Travel time and perinatal mortality after emergency caesarean sections: an evaluation of the 2-hour proximity indicator in Sierra Leone
- Author
-
Håkon A Bolkan, Lars Hagander, Hampus Holmer, Michael M Koroma, Alex J van Duinen, Håvard A Adde, Ola Fredin, Andrew JM Leather, and Arne Wibe
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Introduction Longer travel times are associated with increased adverse maternal and perinatal outcomes. Geospatial modelling has been increasingly used to estimate geographic proximity in emergency obstetric care. In this study, we aimed to assess the correlation between modelled and patient-reported travel times and to evaluate its clinical relevance.Methods Women who delivered by caesarean section in nine hospitals were followed up with home visits at 1 month and 1 year. Travel times between the location before the delivery and the facility where caesarean section was performed were estimated, based on two models (model I Ouma et al; model II Munoz et al). Patient-reported and modelled travel times were compared applying a univariable linear regression analysis, and the relation between travel time and perinatal mortality was assessed.Results The median reported travel time was 60 min, compared with 13 and 34 min estimated by the two models, respectively. The 2-hour access threshold correlated with a patient-reported travel time of 5.7 hours for model I and 1.8 hours for model II. Longer travel times were associated with transport by boat and ambulance, visiting one or two facilities before reaching the final facility, lower education and poverty. Lower perinatal mortality was found both in the group with a reported travel time of 2 hours or less (193 vs 308 per 1000 births, p
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Towards defining the surgical workforce for children: a geospatial analysis in Brazil
- Author
-
Charles Mock, Jonathan Lord, Monica Langer, Niyi Ade-Ajayi, Dan Poenaru, Harshjeet Singh Bal, Massimo Caputo, Damian Clarke, Fred Bulamba, Lubna Samad, David Cunningham, George Youngson, Michael Cooper, Tamara Fitzgerald, Henry Rice, Patrick Kamalo, Emily R Smith, Bistra Zheleva, David Drake, Emily Smith, Lars Hagander, Bassey Edem, Sridhar Gibikote, Jessica Ng, David Spiegel, Saurabh Saluja, Peter Ssenyonga, Thiago Augusto Hernandes Rocha, Joao Vissoci, Nubia Rocha, Mark Shrime, Henry E Rice, Mohamed Abdelmalak, Nurudeen Abdulraheem, Edna Adan Ismail, Eltayeb Ahmed, Sunday Ajike, Olugbemi Benedict Akintububo, Brendan Allen, Emmanuel Ameh, Shanthi Anbuselvan, Jamie Anderson, Theophilus Teddy Kojo Anyomih, Leopold Asakpa, Gudeta Assegie, Jason Axt, Ruben Ayala, Frehun Ayele, Rouma Bankole, Tahmina Banu, Tim Beacon, Stephen Bickler, Zaitun Bokhari, Hiranya Kumar Borah, Eric Borgstein, Nick Boyd, Jason Brill, Britta Budde-Schwartzman, Marilyn Butler, Bruce Bvulani, Sarah Cairo, Juan Francisco Campos Rodezno, Milind Chitnis, Maija Cheung, Bruno Cigliano, Tessa Concepcion, Scott Corlew, Sergio D’Agostino, Shukri Dahir, Bailey Deal, Miliard Derbew, Sushil Dhungel, Elizabeth Drum, Stella Eguma, Beda R. Espineda, Samuel Espinoza, Faye Evans, Jacques Fadhili Bake, Diana Farmer, Tatiana Fazecas, Mohammad Rafi Fazli, Graham Fieggen, Anthony Figaji, Jean Louis Fils, Randall Flick, Gacelle Fossi, George Galiwango, Mike Ganey, Zipporah Gathuya, Maryam Ghavami Adel, Vafa Ghorban Sabagh, Hetal Gohil, Laura Goodman, David Grabski, Sarah Greenberg, Russell Gruen, Rahimullah Hamid, Erik Hansen, William Harkness, Mauricio Herrera, Intisar Hisham, Andrew Hodges, Sarah Hodges, Ai-Xuan Holterman, Andrew Howard, Romeo Ignacio, Dawn Ireland, Enas Ismail, Rebecca Jacob, Anette Jacobsen, Deeptiman James, Ebor Jacob James, Adiyasuren Jamiyanjav, Kathy Jenkins, Guy Jensen, Maria Jimenez, Tarun John K Jacob, Walter Johnson, Anita Joselyn, Nasser Kakembo, Neema Kaseje, Bertille Ki, Phyllis Kisa, Peter Kim, Krishna Kumar, Rashmi Kumar, Charlotte Kvasnovsky, Ananda Lamahewage, Christopher Lavy, Colin Lazarus, Chelsea Lee, Basil Leodoro, Allison Linden, Katrine Lofberg, Jerome Loveland, Leecarlo Millano Lumban Gaol, Vrisha Madhuri, Pavrette Magdala, Luc Kalisya Malemo, Aeesha Malik, John Mathai, Marcia Matias, Bothwell Mbuwayesango, Merrill McHoney, Liz McLeod, Mubarak Mohamed, Ivan Molina, Ashika Morar, Zahid Mukhtar, Mulewa Mulenga, Bhargava Mullapudi, Jack Mulu, Byambajav Munkhjargal, Arlene Muzira, Mary Nabukenya, Mark Newton, Karissa Nguyen, Laurence Isaaya Ntawunga, Peter M. Nthumba, Alp Numanoglu, Benedict Nwomeh, Kristin Ojomo, Keith Oldham, Maryrose Osazuwa, Doruk Ozgediz, Emmanuel Owusu Abem, Shazia Peer, Norgrove Penny, Robin Petroze, Vithya Priya, Ekta Rai, Lola Raji, Vinitha Paul Ravindran, Desigen Reddy, Yona Ringo, Amezene Robelie, Jose Roberto Baratella, David Rothstein, Coleen Sabatini, Soumitra Saha, Lily Saldaña Gallo, John Sekabira, Bello B. Shehu, Ritesh Shrestha, Sabina Siddiqui, David Sigalet, Martin Situma, Adrienne Socci, Etienne St-Louis, Jacob Stephenson, Erin Stieber, Richard Stewart, Vinayak Shukla, Thomas Sims, Faustin Felicien Mouafo Tambo, Robert Tamburro, Mansi Tara, Ahmad Tariq, Reju Thomas, Leopold Torres Contreras, Stephen Ttendo, Benno Ure, Luca Vricella, Luis Vasquez, Vijayakumar Raju, Jorge Villacis, Gustavo Villanova, Catherine deVries, Amira Waheeb, Saber Waheeb, Albert Wandaogo, Anne Wesonga, Sigal Willner, Nyo Nyo Win, Hussein Wissanji, Paul Mwindekuma Wondoh, Garreth Wood, Benjamin Yapo, Yasmine Yousef, Denle'wende' Sylvain Zabsonre, Luis Enrique, Zea Salazar, and Adiyasuren Zevee
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Objectives The optimal size of the health workforce for children’s surgical care around the world remains poorly defined. The goal of this study was to characterise the surgical workforce for children across Brazil, and to identify associations between the surgical workforce and measures of childhood health.Design This study is an ecological, cross-sectional analysis using data from the Brazil public health system (Sistema Único de Saúde).Settings and participants We collected data on the surgical workforce (paediatric surgeons, general surgeons, anaesthesiologists and nursing staff), perioperative mortality rate (POMR) and under-5 mortality rate (U5MR) across Brazil for 2015.Primary and secondary outcome measures We performed descriptive analyses, and identified associations between the workforce and U5MR using geospatial analysis (Getis-Ord-Gi analysis, spatial cluster analysis and linear regression models).Findings There were 39 926 general surgeons, 856 paediatric surgeons, 13 243 anaesthesiologists and 103 793 nurses across Brazil in 2015. The U5MR ranged from 11 to 26 deaths/1000 live births and the POMR ranged from 0.11–0.17 deaths/100 000 children across the country. The surgical workforce is inequitably distributed across the country, with the wealthier South and Southeast regions having a higher workforce density as well as lower U5MR than the poorer North and Northeast regions. Using linear regression, we found an inverse relationship between the surgical workforce density and U5MR. An U5MR of 15 deaths/1000 births across Brazil is associated with a workforce level of 5 paediatric surgeons, 200 surgeons, 100 anaesthesiologists or 700 nurses/100 000 children.Conclusions We found wide disparities in the surgical workforce and childhood mortality across Brazil, with both directly related to socioeconomic status. Areas of increased surgical workforce are associated with lower U5MR. Strategic investment in the surgical workforce may be required to attain optimal health outcomes for children in Brazil, particularly in rural regions.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. How boys and testicles wander to surgery: a nationwide cohort study of surgical delay in Sweden
- Author
-
Lars Hagander, Jonas Björk, Erik Omling, Sanna Bergbrant, and Andreas Persson
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Background Early orchidopexy is recommended for cryptorchidism and the surgery is increasingly centralised. The objectives were to determine the incidence, risk factors and if distance to treating hospital impacted on timely treatment of cryptorchidism.Methods In this observational study, all boys born in Sweden from 2001 to 2014 were followed in national registers to determine the incidence of cryptorchidism by levels of birth-related risk factors and social determinants. Travel time to hospital was used as the primary exposure in multivariable survival analysis, with age at surgery as main outcome.Results Of 748 678 boys at risk for cryptorchidism, 7351 were treated and evaluated for timing of surgery (cumulative childhood incidence 1.4%, 95% CI 1.3% to 1.5%). The incidence was clearly associated with prematurity and overdue pregnancy (HR for 41 weeks HR 1.19 (95% CI 1.10 to 1.29)), low birth weight (
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The rate and perioperative mortality of caesarean section in Sierra Leone
- Author
-
Alex van Duinen, Alimamy P Koroma, Lars Hagander, Hampus Holmer, Michael M Kamara, Håkon Angell Bolkan, Sulaiman Conteh, Fatu Forna, Binyam Hailu, Stefan R Hansson, Michael M Koroma, Jerker Liljestrand, Herman Lonnee, and Santigie Sesay
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Introduction Sierra Leone has the world’s highest maternal mortality, partly due to low access to caesarean section. Limited data are available to guide improvement. In this study, we aimed to analyse the rate and mortality of caesarean sections in the country.Methods We conducted a retrospective study of all caesarean sections and all reported in-facility maternal deaths in Sierra Leone in 2016. All facilities performing caesarean sections were visited. Data on in-facility maternal deaths were retrieved from the Maternal Death Surveillance and Response database. Caesarean section mortality was defined as in-facility perioperative mortality.Results In 2016, there were 7357 caesarean sections in Sierra Leone. This yields a population rate of 2.9% of all live births, a 35% increase from 2012, with district rates ranging from 0.4% to 5.2%. The most common indications for surgery were obstructed labour (42%), hypertensive disorders (25%) and haemorrhage (22%). Ninety-nine deaths occurred during or after caesarean section, and the in-facility perioperative caesarean section mortality rate was 1.5% (median 0.7%, IQR 0–2.2). Haemorrhage was the leading cause of death (73%), and of those who died during or after surgery, 80% had general anaesthesia, 75% received blood transfusion and 22% had a uterine rupture diagnosed.Conclusions The caesarean section rate has increased rapidly in Sierra Leone, but the distribution remains uneven. Caesarean section mortality is high, but there is wide variation. More access to caesarean sections for maternal and neonatal complications is needed in underserved areas, and expansion should be coupled with efforts to limit late presentation, to offer assisted vaginal delivery when indicated and to ensure optimal perioperative care.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Where is the ‘global’ in the European Union’s Health Research and Innovation Agenda?
- Author
-
Till Bärnighausen, Albrecht Jahn, Eva Annette Rehfuess, Ibrahim Abubakar, Kerstin Klipstein-Grobusch, Hutan Ashrafian, Nuria Casamitjana, Antoine Flahault, Anette Agardh, Lars Hagander, Astrid Berner-Rodoreda, Frank Cobelens, Mario Raviglione, Günter Fröschl, Jolene Skordis-Worral, Leo Visser, Constance Schultsz, Antoni Plasència, and Remko van Leeuwen
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Global Health has not featured as prominently in the European Union (EU) research agenda in recent years as it did in the first decade of the new millennium, and participation of low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) in EU health research has declined substantially. The Horizon Europe Research and Innovation Framework adopted by the European Parliament in April 2019 for the period 2021–2027 will serve as an important funding instrument for health research, yet the proposed health research budget to be finalised towards the end of 2019 was reduced from 10% in the current framework, Horizon 2020, to 8% in Horizon Europe. Our analysis takes the evolvement of Horizon Europe from the initial framework of June 2018 to the framework agreed on in April 2019 into account. It shows that despite some improvements in terms of Global Health and reference to the Sustainable Development Goals, European industrial competitiveness continues to play a paramount role, with Global Health research needs and relevant health research for LMICs being only partially addressed. We argue that the globally interconnected nature of health and the transdisciplinary nature of health research need to be fully taken into account and acted on in the new European Research and Innovation Framework. A facilitated global research collaboration through Horizon Europe could ensure that Global Health innovations and solutions benefit all parts of the world including EU countries.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Management and outcomes of gastrointestinal congenital anomalies in low, middle and high income countries: protocol for a multicentre, international, prospective cohort study
- Author
-
Yang Liu, Nick Sevdalis, Melika Akhbari, Niyi Ade-Ajayi, Justine Davies, Dan Poenaru, Dominique Vervoort, Hannah Thompson, Lubna Samad, Stephen Tabiri, Muhammad Arshad, Emily Smith, Lars Hagander, Kokila Lakhoo, Godfrey Sama Philipo, Adesoji Ademuyiwa, Emmanuel Ameh, Cristiana Riboni, Naomi Jane Wright, Laura Herrera, Nana Adofo-Ansong, Harmony Ubhi, Samuel Parker, Sadi Abukhalaf, Ahmad Alhamid, Osaid H. Alser, Emrah Aydin, Yousra-Imane Benaskeur, Shrouk M. Elghazaly, Safa Abdal Elrais, Sophia Hashim, Gabriella Hyman, Henang Kwasau, Bruno Martinez-Leo, Kelly Naranjo, Ibrahim Nour, Mahmoud Saleh, Patricia Shinondo, Marcus Sim, Agota Vaitkiene, Isabelle Williams, Aayenah Yunus, Muhammad Amjad Chaudhary, Muhammad Adnan Khan Khattak, Muhammad Bin Amjad, Marlene Dominguez Anaya, Samiul Hasan, Paolo Bragagnini, Segundo Rite, Hana Arbab, Aqil Soomro, Raed Nael Al-Taher, Ibrahim Rabi Nour, Osama Abdul Kareen Sarhan, Taimur Qureshi, Hina Yousaf, Candy S.C. Choo, Doris Mae Dimatatac, Shireen Anne Nah, Vijay Anand Ismavel, Ann Miriam, Shajin T, Monica Ivanov, Andreea Serban, Eva Blazquez-Gomez, Luis Garcia-Aparicio, Marti Iriondo, Jordi Prat, Xavier Tarrado, Emma Svensson, Alhassan Abdul-Mumin, Dominic Bagbio, Sheila Owusu, and Dayang Anita Abdul Aziz
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Congenital anomalies are the fifth leading cause of death in children
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Adherence to childhood cancer treatment: a prospective cohort study from Northern Vietnam
- Author
-
Bui Ngoc Lan, Anders Castor, Thomas Wiebe, Jacek Toporski, Christian Moëll, and Lars Hagander
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Objectives Global incidence and attention to childhood cancer is increasing and treatment abandonment is a major cause of treatment failure in low- and middle-income countries. The purpose of this study was to gain an understanding of factors contributing to non-adherence to treatment.Design A prospective cohort study with 2 year follow-up of incidence, family-reported motives and risk factors.Setting The largest tertiary paediatric oncology centre in Northern Vietnam.Participants All children offered curative cancer treatment, from January 2008 to December 2009.Primary and secondary outcome measures Family decision to start treatment was analysed with multivariable logistic regression, and family decision to continue treatment was analysed with a multivariable Cox model. This assessment of non-adherence is thereby methodologically consistent with the accepted definitions and recommended practices for evaluation of treatment abandonment.Results Among 731 consecutively admitted patients, 677 were eligible for treatment and were followed for a maximum 2 years. Almost half the parents chose to decline curative care (45.5%), either before (35.2%) or during (10.3%) the course of treatment. Most parents reported perceived poor prognosis as the main reason for non-adherence, followed by financial constraints and traditional medicine preference. The odds of starting treatment increased throughout the study-period (OR 1.04 per month (1.01 to 1.07), p=0.002), and were independently associated with prognosis (OR 0.51 (0.41 to 0.64), p=
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Surgical management of necrotising enterocolitis in Sweden: A national cohort study
- Author
-
Anna Svenningsson, Helena Borg, Lars Hagander, and Helene Engstrand Lilja
- Subjects
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Operative Trauma Courses: A Scoping Review to Inform the Development of a Trauma Surgery Course for Low-Resource Settings
- Author
-
Hannah Wild, Chris Marfo, Charles Mock, Tina Gaarder, Adam Gyedu, Lee Wallis, Emmanuel Makasa, Lars Hagander, Teri Reynolds, Timothy Hardcastle, Teresa Jewell, and Barclay Stewart
- Subjects
Surgery - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Acute burn care and outcomes at the Hospital Nacional Guido Valadares (HNGV), Timor-Leste: A 7-year retrospective study
- Author
-
Junius, Salendo, Joao, Ximenes, Alito, Soares, Glenn, Guest, and Lars, Hagander
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to describe the epidemiology of patients presenting with acute burns and undergoing admission at Hospital Nacional Guido Valadares (HNGV) in Dili, Timor-Leste in the period 2013 to 2019. HNGV is the only tertiary referral hospital in Timor-Leste. This was a retrospective study involving all acute burn patients admitted to the surgical wards of HNGV from 2013 to 2019. The data was collected from patient charts and hospital medical archives. Data were reviewed and analyzed statistically in terms of age, gender, residence, cause, total body surface area (TBSA), burns depth, length of stay (LOS), and mortality. The outcomes were analyzed using logistic regression. Over the 7-year period, there were 288 acute burn patients admitted to the surgical wards of HNGV. Most patients were children (55%), male (65%) and from the capital city of Dili or surrounding areas (59%). The most common cause of burns in children was scalds and the most common cause among adults was flames. Of the admitted patients 59% had burns affecting10% of the TBSA and 41% had full thickness burns. The median LOS was 17 days (1-143) and the average mortality for admitted burn patients in HNGV was 5.6% (annual mortality 0-17%). The odds ratio for extended LOS was 1.9 (95% confidence interval 1.1-3.2) in female compared with male patients. The odds ratio for mortality was 14.6 (95% confidence interval 2.7-80.6) in the older adults when compared with younger adults. Higher TBSA, full thickness burns, and flame burns were also significantly associated with longer LOS and higher mortality. Children and male patients were disproportionately overrepresented among patients admitted to HNGV, while female patients had longer LOS and older adults had more severe injury and a higher risk of mortality. Establishment of a national program for the prevention of burns is essential.
- Published
- 2022
18. Associations of hair cortisol concentrations with paediatric appendicitis
- Author
-
Lars Hagander, Michaela Runnäs, Elvar Theodorsson, Johanna Gudjonsdottir, and Martin Salö
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,Adolescent ,Hydrocortisone ,Biological Stress ,Science ,Paediatric research ,Asymptomatic ,Article ,Pathogenesis ,Arbetsmedicin och miljömedicin ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Gastrointestinal diseases ,Univariate analysis ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Paediatrics ,Occupational Health and Environmental Health ,Appendicitis ,medicine.disease ,Increased risk ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Acute appendicitis ,Medicine ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Hair - Abstract
The pathogenesis of paediatric appendicitis is still an enigma. In recent years, it has become more evident that our inherent immunological responses affect the trajectory of the disease course. Long-term stress has an impact on our immune system; however, it is practically and ethically challenging to prospectively track blood measurements of cortisol-levels in asymptomatic children should an acute appendicitis episode develop. The aim of this case–control study was therefore to evaluate the effect of increased stress measured as historical imprints in hair (hair cortisol concentrations [HCC]), on the risk of developing appendicitis and complicated appendicitis. 51 children (aged p = 0.001). This increased risk remained in the multivariate analysis after adjustment for age, sex and season (aOR OR 10.76 [95%CI 2.50–46.28], p = 0.001). When comparing the cases of uncomplicated and complicated appendicitis through a multivariate analysis, adjusted for age and sex, the children with an increased HCC prior to appendicitis had a substantial and statistically significant increase in risk of complicated appendicitis (aOR 7.86 [95% CI 1.20–51.63], p = 0.03). Biological stress, measured as an increase in HCC, seems to be associated with an increased risk of paediatric appendicitis and a more complicated disease course.
- Published
- 2021
19. Nutritional status and outcome of surgery: A prospective observational cohort study of children at a tertiary surgical hospital in Harare, Zimbabwe
- Author
-
Emil Bergkvist, Lars Hagander, Godfrey I. Muguti, Taurai Zimunhu, and Chenesa Mbanje
- Subjects
Reoperation ,Zimbabwe ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutritional Status ,Logistic regression ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,030225 pediatrics ,Pediatric surgery ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Risk factor ,Child ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Malnutrition ,Nutritional status ,General Medicine ,Evidence-based medicine ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background Undernutrition contributes to nearly 50% of all child deaths in the world, yet there is conflicting evidence regarding the association between nutritional status and postoperative complications. The aim was to describe the preoperative nutritional status among pediatric surgery patients in Zimbabwe, and to assess if nutritional status was a risk factor for adverse postoperative outcome of mortality, surgical site infection, reoperation, readmission, and longer length of stay. Methods This prospective observational cohort study included 136 children undergoing surgery at a tertiary pediatric hospital in Zimbabwe. Nutritional status was standardized using Z-scores for BMI, length, weight, and middle upper arm circumference. Primary outcomes after 30 days included mortality, surgical site infection, reoperation, and readmission. Secondary outcome was length of stay. Univariate and multivariable analyses with logistic regression were performed. Results Of the 136 patients, 31% were undernourished. Postoperative adverse outcome occurred in 20%; the mortality rate was 6%, the surgical site infection rate was 17%, the reoperation rate was 3.5%, and readmission rate was 2.5%. Nutritional status, higher ASA classification, major surgical procedures, and lower preoperative hemoglobin levels were associated with adverse outcome. Univariate logistic regression identified a seven-fold increased risk of postoperative complications among undernourished children (OR 7.3 [2.3–22.8], p = 0.001), and there was a four- to six-fold increased adjusted risk after adjustment for ASA, major surgery, and preoperative hemoglobin. Conclusion A third of all pediatric surgery patients were undernourished, and undernourished children had a considerably higher risk of adverse outcome. With a positive correlation identified between undernourishment and increased postoperative complications, future aims would include assessing if preoperative nutritional treatment could be especially beneficial for undernourished children. Levels of Evidence Level II treatment study.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Prioritizing Surgical Care on National Health Agendas: A Qualitative Case Study of Papua New Guinea, Uganda, and Sierra Leone.
- Author
-
Anna J Dare, Katherine C Lee, Josh Bleicher, Alex E Elobu, Thaim B Kamara, Osborne Liko, Samuel Luboga, Akule Danlop, Gabriel Kune, Lars Hagander, Andrew J M Leather, and Gavin Yamey
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Little is known about the social and political factors that influence priority setting for different health services in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), yet these factors are integral to understanding how national health agendas are established. We investigated factors that facilitate or prevent surgical care from being prioritized in LMICs.We undertook country case studies in Papua New Guinea, Uganda, and Sierra Leone, using a qualitative process-tracing method. We conducted 74 semi-structured interviews with stakeholders involved in health agenda setting and surgical care in these countries. Interviews were triangulated with published academic literature, country reports, national health plans, and policies. Data were analyzed using a conceptual framework based on four components (actor power, ideas, political contexts, issue characteristics) to assess national factors influencing priority for surgery. Political priority for surgical care in the three countries varies. Priority was highest in Papua New Guinea, where surgical care is firmly embedded within national health plans and receives significant domestic and international resources, and much lower in Uganda and Sierra Leone. Factors influencing whether surgical care was prioritized were the degree of sustained and effective domestic advocacy by the local surgical community, the national political and economic environment in which health policy setting occurs, and the influence of international actors, particularly donors, on national agenda setting. The results from Papua New Guinea show that a strong surgical community can generate priority from the ground up, even where other factors are unfavorable.National health agenda setting is a complex social and political process. To embed surgical care within national health policy, sustained advocacy efforts, effective framing of the problem and solutions, and country-specific data are required. Political, technical, and financial support from regional and international partners is also important.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Perinatal outcomes of cesarean deliveries in Sierra Leone: A prospective multicenter observational study
- Author
-
Michael M. Kamara, Arne Wibe, Håkon A. Bolkan, Fatu Forna, Andrew J M Leather, Josien Westendorp, Alex J. van Duinen, Lars Hagander, Marcus J. Rijken, and Obstetrics and Gynaecology
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Fetal monitoring ,Sierra leone ,Sierra Leone ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Partograph ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Perinatal mortality ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Antepartum hemorrhage ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Cesarean Section ,Infant, Newborn ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Cesarean delivery ,General Medicine ,Stillbirth ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Uterine rupture ,Observational study ,Female ,Perinatal death ,Neonatal death ,business ,Perinatal Deaths - Abstract
Objective To analyze the indications for cesarean deliveries and factors associated with adverse perinatal outcomes in Sierra Leone. Methods Between October 2016 and May 2017, patients undergoing cesarean delivery performed by medical doctors and associate clinicians in nine hospitals were included in a prospective observational study. Data were collected perioperatively, at discharge, and during home visits after 30 days. Results In total, 1274 cesarean deliveries were included of which 1099 (86.3%) were performed as emergency surgery. Of the 1376 babies, 261 (19.0%) were perinatal deaths (53 antepartum stillbirths, 155 intrapartum stillbirths, and 53 early neonatal deaths). Indications with the highest perinatal mortality were uterine rupture (45 of 55 [81.8%]), abruptio placentae (61 of 85 [71.8%]), and antepartum hemorrhage (8 of 15 [53.3%]). In the group with cesarean deliveries performed for obstructed and prolonged labor, a partograph was filled out for 212 of 425 (49.9%). However, when completed, babies had 1.81‐fold reduced odds for perinatal death (95% confidence interval 1.03–3.18, P‐value 0.041). Conclusion Cesarean deliveries in Sierra Leone are associated with an exceptionally high perinatal mortality rate of 190 per 1000 births. Late presentation in the facilities and lack of adequate fetal monitoring may be contributing factors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Systematic review of low-income and middle-income country perceptions of visiting surgical teams from high-income countries
- Author
-
Lotta Velin, Adam Lantz, Emmanuel A. Ameh, Nobhojit Roy, Desmond T. Jumbam, Omolara Williams, Alex Elobu, Justina Seyi-Olajide, and Lars Hagander
- Subjects
Ethics ,systematic review ,Health Policy ,Developed Countries ,Communication Barriers ,education ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Income ,Humans ,Etik ,Developing Countries ,United States - Abstract
BackgroundThe shortage of surgeons, anaesthesiologists and obstetricians in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) is occasionally bridged by foreign surgical teams from high-income countries on short-term visits. To advise on ethical guidelines for such activities, the aim of this study was to present LMIC stakeholders’ perceptions of visiting surgical teams from high-income countries.MethodWe performed a systematic review according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis guidelines in November 2021, using standardised search terms in PubMed/Medline (National Library of Medicine), EMBASE (Elsevier), Global Health Database (EBSCO) and Global Index Medicus, and complementary hand searches in African Journals Online and Google Scholar. Included studies were analysed thematically using a meta-ethnographic approach.ResultsOut of 3867 identified studies, 30 articles from 15 countries were included for analysis. Advantages of visiting surgical teams included alleviating clinical care needs, skills improvement, system-level strengthening, academic and career benefits and broader collaboration opportunities. Disadvantages of visiting surgical teams involved poor quality of care and lack of follow-up, insufficient knowledge transfers, dilemmas of ethics and equity, competition, administrative and financial issues and language barriers.ConclusionSurgical short-term visits from high-income countries are insufficiently described from the perspective of stakeholders in LMICs, yet such perspectives are essential for quality of care, ethics and equity, skills and knowledge transfer and sustainable health system strengthening. More in-depth studies, particularly of LMIC perceptions, are required to inform further development of ethical guidelines for global surgery and support ethical and sustainable strengthening of LMIC surgical systems.
- Published
- 2022
23. Catastrophic expenditure and impoverishment after caesarean section in Sierra Leone: An evaluation of the free health care initiative
- Author
-
Hampus Holmer, Andrew J M Leather, Håkon A. Bolkan, Thomas Ashley, Alimamy P. Koroma, Josien Westendorp, Arne Wibe, Aalke Johan van Duinen, Mark G. Shrime, and Lars Hagander
- Subjects
Counterfactual thinking ,Economics ,Epidemiology ,Maternal Health ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Social Sciences ,Geographical locations ,Cost of Illness ,Pregnancy ,Health care ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Public and Occupational Health ,Prospective Studies ,Family Characteristics ,Multidisciplinary ,Financial risk ,Socioeconomic Aspects of Health ,Home visits ,Medicine ,Female ,Research Article ,Adult ,Financing, Personal ,Adolescent ,Science ,Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures ,Sierra leone ,Sierra Leone ,Young Adult ,Health Economics ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Caesarean section ,Social Factors ,Cesarean Section ,business.industry ,Individual income ,Health Care ,Health Care Facilities ,Medical Risk Factors ,Africa ,Health Expenditures ,People and places ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,Finance - Abstract
Background Utilizing surgical services, including caesarean sections, can result in catastrophic expenditure and impoverishment. In 2010, Sierra Leone introduced the Free Health Care Initiative (FHCI), a national financial risk protection program for the most vulnerable groups. Aim of this study was to investigate catastrophic expenditure and impoverishment related to caesarean section in Sierra Leone and evaluate the impact of the FHCI. Methods Women who delivered by caesarean section in nine hospitals were followed up with home visits one month after surgery, and data on medical and non-medical expenditures were collected. Individual income was estimated based on household characteristics and used to determine catastrophic expenditure and impoverishment for each patient. The impact of the FHCI was assessed by comparing actual expenditure with counterfactual expenditures had the initiative not existed. Results For the 1146 patients in the study, the median expenditure was 23 (IQR 4; 56) international dollars (Int$). Patients in the poorest quintile spent a median Int$ 59 (IQR 28; 76), which was significantly more than patients in the richest quintile, who spent a median Int$ 17 (IQR 2; 38, p Conclusion Many women in Sierra Leone face catastrophic expenditure related to caesarean section, mainly through food and travel expenses, and the poor are disproportionally affected. The FHCI is effective in reducing the risk of catastrophic expenditure related to caesarean section, but many patients are still exposed to financial hardship, suggesting that additional support is needed for Sierra Leone’s poorest patients.
- Published
- 2021
24. Global distribution of surgeons, anaesthesiologists, and obstetricians
- Author
-
Hampus Holmer, Adam Lantz, Teena Kunjumen, Samuel Finlayson, Marguerite Hoyler, Amani Siyam, Hernan Montenegro, Edward T Kelley, James Campbell, Meena N Cherian, and Lars Hagander
- Subjects
Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. International migration of surgeons, anaesthesiologists, and obstetricians
- Author
-
Adam Lantz, Hampus Holmer, Samuel Finlayson, Thomas C Ricketts, David Watters, Russell Gruen, and Lars Hagander
- Subjects
Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Nationwide study of appendicitis in children
- Author
-
Erik Omling, Sanna Bergbrant, Saurabh Saluja, Martin Salö, Lars Hagander, Jonas Björk, Anders Persson, and Louise C. Olsson
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,030230 surgery ,Severity of Illness Index ,Health Services Accessibility ,Time-to-Treatment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Age Distribution ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Severity of illness ,Humans ,Medicine ,Sex Distribution ,Risk factor ,General ,Child ,education ,Socioeconomic status ,Sweden ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Original Articles ,Odds ratio ,Appendicitis ,medicine.disease ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Child, Preschool ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Original Article ,Female ,Surgery ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background Paediatric surgical care is increasingly being centralized away from low‐volume centres, and prehospital delay is considered a risk factor for more complicated appendicitis. The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of paediatric appendicitis in Sweden, and to assess whether distance to the hospital was a risk factor for complicated disease. Methods A nationwide cohort study of all paediatric appendicitis cases in Sweden, 2001–2014, was undertaken, including incidence of disease in different population strata, with trends over time. The risk of complicated disease was determined by regression methods, with travel time as the primary exposure and individual‐level socioeconomic determinants as independent variables. Results Some 38 939 children with appendicitis were identified. Of these, 16·8 per cent had complicated disease, and the estimated risk of paediatric appendicitis by age 18 years was 2·5 per cent. Travel time to the treating hospital was not associated with complicated disease (adjusted odds ratio (OR) 1·00 (95 per cent c.i. 0·96 to 1·05) per 30‐min increase; P = 0·934). Level of education (P = 0·177) and family income (P = 0·120) were not independently associated with increased risk of complicated disease. Parental unemployment (adjusted OR 1·17, 95 per cent c.i. 1·05 to 1·32; P = 0·006) and having parents born outside Sweden (1 parent born in Sweden: adjusted OR 1·12, 1·01 to 1·25; both parents born outside Sweden: adjusted OR 1·32, 1·18 to 1·47; P, This study of all paediatric appendicitis cases among Swedish children reports the incidence of disease. Multivariable analysis was performed to estimate the association between travel time to hospital and the risk of complicated appendicitis, adjusted for socioeconomic determinants of health. Increasing travel time to hospital did not seem to increase the risk of complicated appendicitis. One in six complicated
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Cost-effectiveness of surgery and its policy implications for global health: a systematic review and analysis
- Author
-
Dr. Tiffany E Chao, MD, Ketan Sharma, MD, Morgan Mandigo, MSc, Lars Hagander, MD, Stephen C Resch, PhD, Thomas G Weiser, MD, and John G Meara, MD
- Subjects
Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: The perception of surgery as expensive and complex might be a barrier to its widespread acceptance in global health efforts. We did a systematic review and analysis of cost-effectiveness studies that assess surgical interventions in low-income and middle-income countries to help quantify the potential value of surgery. Methods: We searched Medline for all relevant articles published between Jan 1, 1996 and Jan 31, 2013, and searched the reference lists of retrieved articles. We converted all results to 2012 US$. We extracted cost-effectiveness ratios (CERs) and appraised economic assessments for their methodological quality using the 10-point Drummond checklist. Findings: Of the 584 identified studies, 26 met full inclusion criteria. Together, these studies gave 121 independent CERs in seven categories of surgical interventions. The median CER of circumcision ($13·78 per disability-adjusted life year [DALY]) was similar to that of standard vaccinations ($12·96–25·93 per DALY) and bednets for malaria prevention ($6·48–22·04 per DALY). Median CERs of cleft lip or palate repair ($47·74 per DALY), general surgery ($82·32 per DALY), hydrocephalus surgery ($108·74 per DALY), and ophthalmic surgery ($136 per DALY) were similar to that of the BCG vaccine ($51·86–220·39 per DALY). Median CERs of caesarean sections ($315·12 per DALY) and orthopaedic surgery ($381·15 per DALY) are more favourable than those of medical treatment for ischaemic heart disease ($500·41–706·54 per DALY) and HIV treatment with multidrug antiretroviral therapy ($453·74–648·20 per DALY). Interpretation: Our findings suggest that many essential surgical interventions are cost-effective or very cost-effective in resource-poor countries. Quantification of the economic value of surgery provides a strong argument for the expansion of global surgery's role in the global health movement. However, economic value should not be the only argument for resource allocation—other organisational, ethical, and political arguments can also be made for its inclusion. Funding: Massachusetts General Hospital Department of Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, and Stanford University Department of Surgery.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Nationwide paediatric cohort study of a protective association between allergy and complicated appendicitis
- Author
-
Pernilla Stenström, Lars Hagander, Erik Omling, J Merlo, Johanna Gudjonsdottir, N Rudolfson, and Martin Salö
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histamine Antagonists ,Lower risk ,Cohort Studies ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Hypersensitivity ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Risk factor ,Child ,Sweden ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Hazard ratio ,Absolute risk reduction ,Odds ratio ,Allergens ,medicine.disease ,Appendicitis ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Surgery ,Female ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background In a nationwide cohort the potentially protective association between allergy and complicated appendicitis was analysed, and the influence of seasonal antigens, antihistamine treatment, and timing of allergy onset assessed. Methods Some 1 112 571 children born between 2000 and 2010 were followed from birth until the end of 2014. A cross-sectional analysis of appendicitis cases, with comparison of allergic versus non-allergic children for absolute risk and odds of complicated appendicitis was first undertaken. This was followed by a longitudinal analysis of children with allergy and matched controls who had never had an allergy, for incidence rate and hazard of subsequent complicated or simple appendicitis. Results Of all children, 20.4 per cent developed allergy and 0.6 per cent had appendicitis during follow-up. Among children with appendicitis, complicated appendicitis was more common among non-allergic children (18.9 per cent, 948 of 5016) than allergic children (12.8 per cent, 173 of 1351) (P Conclusion Children with allergy have a lower risk of complicated appendicitis, but the same overall risk of simple appendicitis. Seasonal antigen exposure reduced, and antihistamine treatment increased, the risk of complicated disease.
- Published
- 2021
29. Mortality from gastrointestinal congenital anomalies at 264 hospitals in 74 low-income, middle-income, and high-income countries: a multicentre, international, prospective cohort study
- Author
-
Naomi Jane Wright, Andrew J.M. Leather, Niyi Ade-Ajayi, Nick Sevdalis, Justine Davies, Dan Poenaru, Emmanuel Ameh, Adesoji Ademuyiwa, Kokila Lakhoo, Emily Rose Smith, Abdel Douiri, Maria Elstad, Marcus Sim, Cristiana Riboni, Bruno Martinez-Leo, Melika Akhbari, Stephen Tabiri, Ashrarur Mitul, Dayang Anita Abdul Aziz, Camila Fachin, Alliance Niyukuri, Muhammad Arshad, Fowzia Ibrahim, Natalie Moitt, Mohamed Fahmy Doheim, Hannah Thompson, Harmony Ubhi, Isabelle Williams, Sophia Hashim, Godfrey Sama Philipo, Laura Herrera, Aayenah Yunus, Dominique Vervoort, Samuel Parker, Yousra-Imane Benaskeur, Osaid H. Alser, Nana Adofo-Ansong, Ahmad Alhamid, Hosni khairy Salem, Mahmoud Saleh, Safa Abdal Elrais, Sadi Abukhalaf, Patricia Shinondo, Ibrahim Nour, Emrah Aydin, Agota Vaitkiene, Kelly Naranjo, Andile Maqhawe Dube, Sodumisa Ngwenya, Mina A. Yacoub, Henang Kwasau, Gabriella Hyman, Shrouk Mahmoud Elghazaly, Ibrahim Al-Slaibi, Intisar Hisham, Helena Franco, Hana Arbab, Lubna Samad, Aqil Soomro, Muhammad Amjad Chaudhry, Safina Karim, Muhammad Adnan Khan Khattak, Shireen Anne Nah, Doris Mae Dimatatac, Candy SC Choo, Niveshni Maistry, Ashrarur Rahman Mitul, Samiul Hasan, Sabbir Karim, Hina Yousuf, Taimur Qureshi, Ibrahim Rabi Nour, Raed Nael Al-Taher, Osama Abdul Kareem Sarhan, Luis Garcia-Aparicio, Jordi Prat, Eva Blazquez-Gomez, Xavier Tarrado, Martí Iriondo, Paolo Bragagnini, Segundo Rite, Lars Hagander, Emma Svensson, Sheila Owusu, Alhassan Abdul-Mumin, Dominic Bagbio, Vijay Anand Ismavel, Ann Miriam, Shajin T, Marlene Anaya Dominguez, Monica Ivanov, Andreea Madalina Serban, Miliard Derbew, Mahmoud Elfiky, Maricarmen Olivos Perez, Marcia Abrunhosa Matias, Alexis P Arnaud, Ahmed Negida, Sebastian King, Mohamad Rafi Fazli, Nadia Hamidi, Souhem Touabti, Rossana Francisco Chipalavela, Pablo Lobos, Brendan Jones, Damir Ljuhar, Georg Singer, Annelien Cordonnier, Lorena Jáuregui, Zlatan Zvizdic, Janice Wong, Etienne St-Louis, Qiang Shu, Yang Lui, Catalina Correa, Lucie Pos, Elvyn Alcántara, Erick Féliz, Luis Enrique Zea-Salazar, Liza Ali, Matthieu Peycelon, Nzanzu Kipata Anatole, Cherno S. Jallow, Judith Lindert, Dhruv Ghosh, Cathline Freya Adhiwidjaja, Ahmad Khaleghnejad Tabari, Saran Lotfollahzadeh, Haidar Mohammad Mussein, Fabrizio Vatta, Noemi Pasqua, David Kihiko, Hetal Gohil, Ibrahim R. Nour, Muhammed Elhadi, Suad Ahmed Almada, Gilvydas Verkauskas, Toni Risteski, Alejandro Peñarrieta Daher, Oumaima Outani, James Hamill, Taiwo Lawal, Jack Mulu, Benjamin Yapo, Lily Saldaña, Beda Espineda, Krystian Toczewski, Eugene Tuyishime, Isaac Ndayishimiye, Enaam Raboe, Philip Hammond, Gregor Walker, Ivona Djordjevic, Milind Chitnis, Joonhyuk Son, Sanghoon Lee, Muaad Hussien, Sawazen Malik, Enas Musa Ismail, Ampaipan Boonthai, Nesrine Ben Hadj Dahman, Nigel Hall, Fabiola Ruth Castedo Camacho, Helena Sobrero, Marilyn Butler, Aliev Makhmud, Nathan Novotny, Ahmad G. Hammouri, Maisara Al-Rayyes, Bruce Bvulani, Qais Muraveji, Muhammad Yousuf Murzaie, Ajmal Sherzad, Sayed Aman Haidari, Abdul Baqi Monawar, Dr. Ahmad Zia Samadi, Jesh Thiessen, Ntakarutimana Venant, Sonia Inamuco Hospital, Niyonkuru Jérémie, Jean Claude Mbonicura, Butoyi Jean Marie Vianney, Amezene Tadesse, Samuel Negash, Charles A. Roberts, John N. Jabang, Abdoulie Bah, Kajali Camamra, Armandou Correa, Babucarr Sowe, A. Gai, Musa Jaiteh, Kwizera Jean Raymond, Jean Paul Mvukiyehe, Innocent Itangishaka, Emmanuel Kayibanda, Emery Manirambona, Joseph Lule, Ainhoa Costas-Chavarri, Ian Shyaka Gashugi, Albert Ndata, Georges Gasana, Yves Castar Nezerwa, Turatsinze Simeon, Jean De Dieu Muragijimana, Sakina Rashid, David Msuya, Joseph Elisante, Meghna Solanki, Emmanuel Manjira, Jay Lodhia, Mubashir Jusabani, Murad Tarmohamed, Sengua Koipapi, Touabti Souhem, Nabti Sara, Brahimi Sihem, Bouguermouh Dania, Iaiche Achour Toufik, Baghdadi Nour el islam Mounira, Alouani Habiba, Liliana Aragão, Victor Gonçalves, Marcelo Mauricio Lino Urquizo, Maria Florencia Varela, Pedro Mercado, Bonavia Horacio, Andrea Damiani, Carlos Mac, Daniel Putruele, Karen Liljesthrom, Marianela Bernaus, Cesar Jauri, Alejandrina Cripovich, Ezequiel Bianchin, Maria Gabriela Puig, Lorna Andreussi, Susana Iracelay, Dolores Marcos, Carina Herrera, Nelly Palacios, Romina Avile, Belen Serezo, Debora Montoya, Rodrigo Cepeda, Justo Vaquila, Sofficci Veronica, Liliana Pardo, Pelussi Valeria, Lapalma Julio, Aranda Diego Martin, Palazzi Lucio, Comba Gabriel, Depetrini Marianella, José Alfredo Calderón Arancibia, Enrique Huespe, Gabriela Natalia Losa, Elsa Arancibia Gutiérrez, Humberto Scherl, Daniel Emilio Gonzalez, Valentina Baistrocchi, Yanina Silva, Marcelo Galdeano, Pablo Medard, Ines Sueiras, Enrique Romero Manteola, Victor Hugo Defago, Carlos Mieres, Carlos Alberto, Fabio Cornelli, Marcelo Molina, Pablo Ravetta, Celeste Carolina Patiño Gonzalez, Maria Belen Dallegre, Maria Tatiana Szklarz, Marcos Federico Leyba, Nahuel Ignacio Rivarola, Maria Delia Charras, Adriana Morales, Paloma Caseb, Luzia Toselli, Carolina Millán, Maria del Carmen Junes, Oscar Di Siervi, Jose Gilardi, Soledad Simon, Carla Sofia Contreras, Nair Rojas, Lucia Beatriz Arnoletto, Otilia Eva Blain, Mauro Nicolas Bravo, Nancy Sanchez, Luciana Martina Herrera Pesara, Maria Eugenia Moreno, Carlos Ariel Sferco, Umama Huq, Tamanna Ferdousi, Abdullah Al-Mamun, Sadia Sultana, Refoyez Mahmud, Khalid Mahmud, Fatema Sayeed, Alexander Svirsky, Denisse Sempertegui, Amalia Negrete, Araceli Teran, Mariana Sadagurschi, Nusret Popovic, Kenan Karavdic, Emir Milisic, Asmir Jonuzi, Amira Mesic, Sabina Terzic, Nejra Dendusic, Elna Biber, Anesa Sehic, Nada Zvizdic, Emina Letic, Adna Saracevic, Ajla Hamidovic, Nejra Selak, Dzan Horozic, Lamija Hukic, Amila Muhic, Nedim Vanis, Emir Sokolovic, Adnan Sabic, Karin Becker, Elis Novochadlo Klüppel, André Iván Bradley dos Santos Dias, Miguel Angelo Agulham, Cristiano Bischoff, Stella Sabbatini, Rachel Fernandes de Souza, Ana Beatriz Souza Machado, Juliana Werneck Raposo, Maria Lucia da Silva Augusto, Bianca M.R. Martins, Mariana de Souza Santos Ferreira, Darli Fernandes de Oliveira, Carla Silva dos Santos, Fernanda Ribeiro de Fernández y Alcázar, Érika Alves Dutra da Silva, Mariana Furtado, Horácio Tamada, Marília Silva Ferreira dos Santos, Thayná Lopes de Almeida, Susy Oliveira de Andrade, Antonio Cipriano Gurgel do Amaral, Lais Sartori Giovanoni, Kamila de Deus Passos Leles, Eduardo Corrêa Costa, Leticia Feldens, Luciano Ferraz Schopf, José Carlos Soares de Fraga, Felipe Colombo de Holanda, Paola Maria Brolin Santis Isolan, Julia Loyola Ferreira, Carla Luisa Bruxel, Danielle Lopes Teixeira Ferdinando, Fabricio Zottis Barcelos, Natalia Baseggio, Nicole Knorr Brenner, Rafael Trindade Deyl, Carolina Dure, Iuri Nunes Kist, Rafael Bueno Mazzuca, Sarah Bueno Motter, Yna Ramos, Cristine Suzana Trein, Bianca Rezende Rosa, Murilo de Assis Silva, Flavio Augusto Menin, Isabela Cristina Semensato Carloni, Juliana Antinarelli Norberto da Silva, Adriano Luis Gomes, Mariana Girão Tauffer, Paulo César Bassan Gonçalves, Geraldo Magela Nogueira Marques, Eliane Moriya, Carla Labonia, Ana Lucia Carrasco, Karine Furtado Meyer, Luiz Farion-Aguiar, Fernando Amado, Amanda Antunes, Elisângela Silva, Leila Telles, Giovana Almeida, Aluísio Augusto Belmino Gadelha, Flavia de Azevedo Belesa, Acimar Gonçalves da Cunha, Jr, Beatriz Souza Barros, Josiane Bernartt Zanellato, Patricia Guimarães, Karina Ilheu da Silva, Bianca Ribas, Cristina Reuter, Francis Tanise Casado, Mila Torii Correa Leite, Daniela Testoni, Ruth Guinsburg, Simone de Campos Vieira Abib, Edson Khodor Cury, Suely Dornellas do Nascimento, Arthur Almeida Aguiar, Rodrigo Melo Gallindo, Carolina Gonçalves Borges, Yang Liu, Cai Duote, Jinhu Wang, Zhigang Gao, Liang Liang, Wenjuan Luo, Xiaoxia Zhao, Rui Chen, Peng Wang, Yijiang Han, Ting Huang, Hu Donglai, Guo Xiaodong, Chen Junjie, Libin Zhu, Guowei Wu, Xiaozhou Bao, Haijing Li, Junying Lv, Zhongrong Li, Feng Yong, Zhou Chong Gao, Qiang Bai, Weibing Tang, Hua Xie, Jethishka Motee, Jianming Zhu, Gang Wen, Weiwei Ruan, Shungen Li, Lulu Chen, Shungen Huang, Zhibao Lv, Jinjing Lu, Liuming Huang, Mengnan Yu, Wang Dajia, Yu Zuo Bai, Luis Carlos Rincon, Juliana Mancera, Edgar Alzate Gallego, Laura Torres-Canchala, Nathalia Silva Beltrán, Ghordana Osorio Fory, Daniela Castaño Avila, Angelica Maria Forero Ladino, Juanita Gomez, Martha Jaramillo, Otto Morales, Beatriz Sanchez, Nestor Julien Tinoco Guzmán, Sergio Castañeda Espinosa, Osbaldo Prieto Vargas, Lina Maria Pardo, Eliana Toral, Freud Cáceres Aucatoma, Daniel Hinostroza, Santiago Valencia, Vicente Salinas, Enrique Landivar Cino, Gabriela Yulissa Ponce Fajardo, Miguel Astudillo, Virginia Garcia, Guillermo Muñoz, Leonardo Verduga, Ivan Verduga, Ericka Murillo, Elena Bucaram, Marisol Guayelema, Monica Marmol, Janina Sanchez, Carolina Vergara, Adriana Mena, Junior Velaña, Karla Salazar, Sandra Lara, Elena Chiriboga, Julian Silva, Dalia Gad, Doaa Samy, Menan Ahmed Elsadek, Hanan Mahmoud Mohammed, Mohamed Abouheba, Karim Osamy Ali, Hayssam Rashwan, Omar Moustafa Fawzy, Tarek mohamed Kamel, Rawan Nemer, Mohamed Abada Hassan, Eyad Hassan Falah, Dina Sobhy Abdelhady, Mostafa Zain, Eman Abouzeid Abouzeid Ibrahim, Omar Ossama Elsiraffy, Ahmed Aboelela, Eman mohamed Farag, Ahmed Mohamed Oshiba, Omar Sameh Emam, Alaa Mobarak Attia, Moustafa A. Laymouna, Islam Abdelmonem Ghorab, Mansour Mkayed Mohammed, Nourhan Akram Soliman, Khaled Abd elrahman Ghaly, Kareem Sadek, Mohamed Elsherbiny, Amr Saleh, Hesham Sheir, Tamer Wafa, Mohamed Abd Elmenam, Sherif Abdelmaksoud, Ahmed Reda, Islam Mansour, Mohamed Elzohiri, Basma Waseem, Mohamed Elewaily, Mohammed El-Ghazaly, Ahmad Elhattab, Amr Shalaby, Adham Elsaied, Ahmad Adawy, Mirna Sadek, Mahmoud Abdelfattah Ahmed, Mohamed Omar Herdan, Gena Mohamed Hamed Elassall, Azhar Arabi Mohammed, Mohammed Hamada Takrouney, Tarek Mohamed Essa, Ahmed Mokhtar Mahmoud, Alshaimaa M. Saad, Mariam Albatoul Nageh Fouly, Mahmoud abdelshakour Ibrahim, Mohammad Nageh, Mahmoud M. Saad, Helmy Badr, Mohamed Fayez Fouda, Ahmed Hassan Nofal, Hisham Almohamady, Mohamed Ahmed Arafa, Mohamed Amad, Mohamed Awad Mansour, Jennifer O'Connor, Zachary O'Connor, Nzanzu Anatole, Elysé Nkunzimana, Solomon Machemedze, Lemfuka Dieudonné, William Appeadu-Mensah, Theophilus Teddy Kojo Anyomih, Priscilla Alhassan, Francis A. Abantanga, Vishal Michael, Roshine Mary Koshy, Ankit Raj, Vijay Kumar, Sundeep PT, P Santosh Prabhu, Armin Vosoughi, Ali Farooq Al-Mayoof, Muhamed Jassim Fadhle, Ali Egab Joda, Hayder Nadhim Obaid Algabri, Sultan S. Abdelhamid, Hashem M. Al-Momani, Marzouq Amarin, Louay Y. Zaghlol, Nijmeh Nasser Alsaadi, Yasmeen Z. Qwaider, Hibah Qutishat, Ahmad Hasan Aliwisat, Esraa Arabiat, Isam Bsisu, Raghad M. Murshidi, Mohammad S. Jabaiti, Ziad A. Bataineh, Husam Aldean Abuhayyeh, Thekraiat M. Al Quran, Faris J. Abu Za'nouneh, Mohanad Mutasem Alebbini, Hamzah Abullah Qudah, Omar Ghazi Hussein, Amir M.I. Murad, Justin Z. Amarin, Haya H. Suradi, Sayel H. Alzraikat, Rand Y. Omari, Bashar M. Matour, Layana Al-Halbouni, Rajai O. Zurikat, Ahmad H. Yanis, Sara Al Hussein, Ali Shoubaki, Waleed H. Ghanem, Kuria David, Soita Wycliffe Chitiavi, Moraa Mose, Robert Mugo, James Ndungu, Timothy Mwai, Swaleh Shahbal, Janan Malik, Nirav Chauhan, Francisa Syovata, Kevin Ochieng, Polycarp Omendo Liyenzero, Syeda Ra'ana Hussain, Stanley Mugambi, Roseline Ochieng, Ebtesam Othman Abdulsalam Elkhazmi, Ala Khaled, Aya Albozidi, Manal Ben Enbaya, Mala Elgammudi, Enas Soula, Wegden ibrahim almabrouk Khalel, Yasmine Ali Elhajjaji, Nouriyah Ali Alwaggaa, Sumayyah Ghayth, Dafer abdulhakim .S. Zreeg, Sara Abobaker Tantush, Fatma Bibas, Tesneem Layas, Randa Alamen M Sharif, Wesal Omar F. Saied Aljadidi, Ahmed Tarek, Hazem Ahmed, Kamila Almabrouk Mohammed Essamilghi, Mabroka Alfoghi, Ma'aly A. Abuhlega, Saddam Arrmali, Fatima Mousa Abduljawad, Hasan Mustafa Alosta, Abdulsalam Abuajaila, Fakereldeen Abdelmutalib, Fatma Bashir, Inas Almengar, Mohammad hasan Annajjar, Abdelaziz Deyab, Fathi Elzowawi, Yousef Krayem, Weam Drah, Asma Meftah, Abobaker Mohammed, Lina Ali Arrmalli, Hajir Aljaboo, Abdallah Elayeb, Mohamed Altomi, Ahmed Altaweel, Mohamed Tumi, Hana Milad Bazozi, Aisha Shaklawoon, Mohammed Meftah Alglaib, Abdullahn Abdousalam Elkaloush, Sara Trainba, Hisham Swessi, Ali Alnaeri, Aya Essam Shnishah, Hamassat Mustufa, Sondas Ali Gargum, Sara Ali Tarniba, Hawa Ahmed Shalluf, Hajer Ali Shokri, Taher L. Sarkaz, Osama Tababa, Ahmed Elhadi, Vesna Cvetanovska Naunova, Laze Jovcheski, Marjan Kamilovski, Aleksandra Gavrilovska-Brzanov, Zarina Abdul Latiff, Siti Farhan Moh Pauzi, Marjmin Osman, Felicia Lim, Ainal Huda Abu Bakar, Azrina SK Zaman, Shareena Ishak, Rufinah Teo, Dr. Tammy Teoh Han Qi, Mohd Yusran Bin Othman, Dato' Dr Zakaria bin Zahari, Zulfitri bin Md Hassan, Cheah Hui Shan, Abhirrami Lechmiannandan, Hafatin Fairos bt Tamaddun, Mohd Fitri Shukri bin Mohamed Adanan, Mohd Yusof bin Abdullah, Wang Junyi, Mohd. Tarmizi Mohd Nor, Wan Ruzaimie Noor, Mohd Razin bin Hassan, Noor Fa'izatul Rahil Ambok Dalek, Hidayah Hayati binti Hashim, Ahmad Zulhisyam bin Zarwawi, V Muthualhagi M Vellusamy, Quah Soong Yuen, Hemasutha a/p Kannessan, Najua binti Ramli, Ahmad Shafiee bin Bujarimin, Jessmine Anntinea, Anthony Dass, Hazlina Mohd. Khalid, Nur Atiqah binti Mohd Hanifah, Keily Wong Yue Jyun, Rahilah binti Abd Razak, Nur Atifah binti Mohd Naim, Siti Nur Aien binti Hamid Hamzah, Cristian R. Zalles Vidal, Eduardo Bracho Blanchet, Roberto Dávila Perez, Emilio Fernandez Portilla, Raúl Villegas Silva, Daniel Ibarra, Antonio Calderon Moore, Cesar Carrasco-Ortega, Monica Noguez Castillo, Dorihela Herappe Mellado, Guillermo Yanowsky Reyes, Luis Fernando Gonzalez Cortez, Rafael Santana Ortiz, Jamie Orozco Perez, Jorge Román Corona C.Rivera, Juan Jose Cardenas Ruiz Velasco, Moises Quiles Corona, Christian Peña Padilla, Lucina Bobadilla Morales, Alfredo Corona Rivera, Izabel Maryalexandra Rios Flores, Cristian Irela Aranda Sánchez, Gabriela Ambriz-González, Nestor Martínez Hernández Magro, Francisco Javier León Frutos, José de Jesús Cárdenas Barón, Alejandro González Ojeda, Jessica Yarza Fernández, Juan Domingo Porras, Pastor Aguirre-Lopez, Vicente Sánchez Paredes, Arturo Montalvo Marin, Jose Manuel Diaz Gomez, Lorenzo Juvencio Caamal, David Bulnes Mendizabal, Pablo Sanchez Valladares, Humberto Garcia Martinez, Opeoluwa Adesanya, Moses Olanrewaju, Rilwan Adegboyega, Nurudeen Abdulraheem, Anuoluwapo Aremo, Florence Dedeke, Anyanwu Lofty-John Chukwuemeka, Mohammad Aminu Mohammad, Abdullahi Lawalbarau, Nwokoro Collins, Ogundele Ibukunolu, Amo Shonubi, Oluwaseun Ladipo-Ajayi, Olumide Abiodun Elebute, Justina Seyi-Olajide, Felix Alakaloko, George Ihediwa, Kayode Olayade, Christopher Bode, Olakayode Ogundoyin, Dare I. Olulana, Ifeanyichukwu Kelvin Egbuchulem, Felix O. Kumolalo, Ikechukwu Ulasi, Uchechukwu Obiora Ezomike, Sebastian Okwuchukwu Ekenze, Elochukwu Perpetua Nwankwo, Emmanuel Ifeanyi Nwangwu, Isaac Chukwu, Christopher Chim Amah, Nene Elsie Obianyo, Omolara Williams, Roland Iheanyichukwu Osuoji, Omolara Moronkeji Faboya, Olalekan Temitope Ajai, Moruf Adekunle Abdulsalam, Titiloye Hannah Agboola, Bolarinwa Bolanle Temilade, Maryrose Osazuwa, Morayo Monsurat Salawu, Eze Chukwuemeka Ejinkeonye, Mariya Mukhtar Yola, Amsa B. Mairami, Adekunle T. Otuneye, Matthias Igoche, Adebayo Gbenga Tanimola, Emmanuel Akinlabi Ajao, Efeturi Agelebe, Samson Olori, Philip Mari Mshelbwala, Olabisi Osagie, Adewale Oyinloye, Auwal M Abubakar, Lateef Oyebanji, Ibrahim Shehu, Cyril Cletus, Ahmed Bamanga, Faruk Suleiman, Sani Adamu, David C.Nwosu, Yahya S.Alkali, Iliya Jalo, Aliu Rasaki, Yusuf T.Sambo, Kalakwa A.Mohammed, Abubakar M.Ballah, Victor Modekwe, Okechukwu Hyginus Ekwunife, Ugochukwu S Ezidiegwu, Andrew N Osuigwe, Jideofor O Ugwu, Chuka A Ugwunne, Nadeem Akhter, Mudassir Fayaz Gondal, Rafee Raza, Ali Raza Chaudary, Hassan Ali, Muhammad Umar Nisar, Muhammad Umer Jamal, Ghuri Shankar Pandit, Uzma Mumtaz, Muhammad Bin Amjad, Nabila Talat, Wajeeh ur Rehman, Muhammad Saleem, Muhammad Bilal Mirza, Imran Hashim, Naveed Haider, Soban Hameed, Ayesha Saleem, Sohail Dogar, Muhammad Sharif, Muhammad Kashif Bashir, Fatima Naumeri, Zarqa Rani, Muath A.M. Baniowda, Basheer Ba'baa', Majd Yousef Mohammed Hassan, Ammar Darwish, Abrar Shaheen Sehwiel, Mohammed Shehada, Abrar ghassan Balousha, Yara Ajrami, Ainaa Ata Mohammad Alzamari, Bashar Yaghi, Hasan Subhi Hasan Abu Al-saleem, Mervat Sufian Abu Farha, Mohammad Omar Mohammad Abdelhafez, Firas Anaya, Asef belal Qadomi, Abd Al-Naser Bany Odi, Muath Abdelrahem Fuad Assi, Fadwa Sharabati, Ahmad Abueideh, Doha mustafa saleh Beshtawi, Hasan Arafat, Lara Zahi Adel Khatatba, Safa' Jamal Abatli, Hiba Al-Tammam, Dania Jaber, Yara Imad Omar Kayed, Ali Abdelhay Abumunshar, Rami Anwar Misk, Asmahan Mohammad Suliman Alzeer, Mutassem Sharabati, Ihsan Ghazzawi, Osama Majed Darras, Mahmoud M.Qabaja, Ma'alem sameer Hajajreh, Yasmeen Ahmad Samarah, Dua Hasan Yaghi, Moradallah Asad Fahmi Qunaibi, Abdelrazzaq Abu Mayaleh, Sharehan Joubeh, Annan Ebeido, Samer Adawi, Ihda Adawi, Mohammad Omar Ibrahim Alqor, Ahmad Samih Arar, Hadeel Awad, Fawzi Abu-Nejmah, Osaid Shaher Shabana, Firas Alqarajeh, Tareq Z. Alzughayyar, Jomana Madieh, Mahmoud Fuad Sbaih, Raghad mohammad abdu Alkareem, Raghad abdullateef Lahlooh, Yasmeen Adly Halabi, Wisam Baker, Tasneem Fathi Hasan Almusleh, Abdulraheem Adnan Abdulraheem Tahyneh, Yazid yousef mahmoud Atatri, Najlaa Abu Jamie, Nasrallah Ashraf Al Massry, Walaa Lubbad, Ayoub A.Nemer, Mohammed Alser, Aya Azmi Shehda Salha, Khaled Alnahhal, Aya Mahmoud Elmzyyen, Amir Talat Sheda Ghabayen, Abdulwhhab Ayman Abu Alamrain, Samar H. Al-Shwaikh, Omar Adly Elshaer, Nureddin Shaheen, Jehad Fares, Hisham Dalloul, Anas Qawwash, Mustafa abu Jayyab, Dina Ayman Ashour, Ahmad Ashraf Shaheen, Samy Rafat Ramadan Naim, Eman Abu Shiha, Nagham Mohammed Al Dammagh, Walaa Almadhoun, Ashraf Ayman Al-Salhi, Abdalkarim Yhya Hammato, Jamal Mohammed Salim, Doaa Khalil Hasanain, Soha Marwan Salem Alwadia, Ismail Nassar, Hala M. Al-Attar, Haya Abdulnasser Ali Alshaikhkhalil, Yasmin Mohammed Khalil Abu Jamie, Yara shareef Ashour, Sharif S. Alijla, Mohamed Anwer El Tallaa, Adham Ashraf Abuattaya, Bisan D.M. Wishah, MOHAMMED A.M. ALDIRAWI, Ahmed S Darwish, Sulaiman T. Alzerei, Nidal Wishah, Sharif Alijla, Isidora Garcia, Marlene Diaz Echegaray, Veronica Raquel Cañapataña Sahuanay, Fernando Trigoso Mori, Jackelyne Alvarado Zelada, Juan Jose Salinas Barreto, Porfirio Rivera Altamirano, Cesar Torres Miranda, Rocio Anicama Elias, Julio Rivera Alvarez, Juan Pedro Vasquez Matos, Fernando Ayque Rosas, Jesmarina Ledesma Peraza, Andrea Gutarra Palomino, Stephany Vega Centen, Victor Casquero, María Rosa Ortiz Argomedo, Francisco Lapouble, Genaro Llap Unchón, Florangel Patricia Delgado Malaga, Luis Ortega Sotelo, Segundo Gamboa Kcomt, Araceli Villalba Villalba, Nancy Rossana Mendoza Leon, Loreley Raquel Cardenas Alva, Maria Susana Loo Neyra, Cathy Lee Alanguia Chipana, Cintya Maria de Jesus Torres Picón, Natalia Huaytalla Quiroz, Danny Dominguez, Carlos Segura Calle, Jenny Arauco, Luis Ormeño Calderón, Ximena Ghilardi Silva, Miriam Daniela Fernandez Wilson, Joan Elizabeth Gutierrez Maldonado, Cesar Diaz Leon, Waldo Berrocal Anaya, Patricia Chavez Galvez, Prince Pamela Aguilar Gargurevich, Flor de Maria Diaz Castañeda, Carmen Guisse, Erika Ramos Paredes, Jose Luis Apaza Leon, Faye Aguilar Aguilar, Raul Ramirez De La Cruz, Lenny Flores Carbajal, Carlos Mendoza Chiroque, Gladys Johana Sulca Cruzado, Natalia Tovar Gutierrez, Jennifer Sotelo Sanchez, Carolina Paz Soldan, Karina Hernández Córdova, Edgar Fernando Delgado Quinteros, Luz Mery Brito Quevedo, Juan Jose Mendoza Oviedo, Angel Samanez Obeso, Patricia Paredes Espinoza, Johann de Guzman, Raisa Yu, Vlad Cosoreanu, Sebastian Ionescu, Aurel Mironescu, Lucian Vida, Adrian Papa, Roxana Verdeata, Bogdan Gavrila, Liviu Muntean, Marija Lukac, Miona Stojanovic, Djordje Toplicic, Milan Slavkovic, Andjelka Slavkovi, Dragoljub Zivanovic, Ana Kostic, Maja Raicevic, Delphine Nkuliza, Daniel Sidler, Corné de Vos, Elmarie vd Merwe, David Tasker, Omar Khamag, Cecilia Rengura, Thozama Siyotula, Uzair Jooma, Dirk von Delft, Marion Arnold, Hansraj Mangray, Shamaman Harilal, Sanele Madziba, Naveen Wijekoon, Tharanga Gamage, Benedict Paul Bright, Alaa Abdulrahman, Ola Ahmed Abdulmjeed Mohammed, Mohammed Salah, Ahmad Elian Abu Ajwa, Mohammed Morjan, Mohammad Mohannad Batal, Vivian Faks, Mohamad Bassel Mouti, Ahmadfateh Assi, Ahmad Al-Mouakeh, Ahmad Sankari Tarabishi, Ziad Aljarad, Aos Alhamid, Jiraporn Khorana, Wannisa Poocharoen, Sirima Liukitithara, Anan Sriniworn, Wasun Nuntasunti, Monawat Ngerncham, Ratiyaporn Phannua, Kanokrat Thaiwatcharamas, Patchareeporn Tanming, Lassaad Sahnoun, Nahla Kchiche, Roua Abdelmoumen, Egemen Eroğlu, Mehmet Ali Ozen, Hatice Sonay Yalçın Cömert, Mustafa İmamoğlu, Haluk Sarıhan, Şebnem Kader, Mehmet Mutlu, Yakup Aslan, Ahmet Beşir, Şükran Geze, Bahanur Çekiç, Ali Yalcinkaya, Kaan Sönmez, Ramazan Karabulut, Zafer Türkyılmaz, Kıvanç Şeref, Merve Altın, Merve Aykut, M.Eren Akan, Melisa Erdem, Ebru Ergenekon, Canan Türkyılmaz, Elif Keleş, Ali Canözer, Aslı Öztürk Yeniay, Elif Eren, İlknur Banlı Cesur, Zerrin Özçelik, Gökmen Kurt, Mustafa Kurthan Mert, Hatice Kaya, Müge Çelik, Suleyman Cuneyt Karakus, Nazile Erturk, Alev Suzen, Nilay Hakan, Fatih Akova, Mehmet Pasaoglu, Shukurali Eshkabilov, Rustam Z. Yuldashev, Dekhkonboev Avazjon Abdunomonovich, Aliev Makhmudjan Muslimovich, Azad Patel, Chisengo Kapihya, Nicholas Ensar, Ramesh M Nataraja, Mithila Sivasubramaniam, Matthew Jones, Warwick Teague, Sharman Tan Tanny, Gordon Thomas, Kiera Roberts, Soundappan Sannappa Venkatraman, Holger Till, Manon Pigeolet, Martine Dassonville, Anas Shikha, Win Sabai Phyu Win, Zahidah Adlynee Haji Ahmad, Léamarie Meloche-Dumas, Louise Caouette-Laberge, Dickens St-Vil, Ann Aspirot, Nelson Piché, Shahrzad Joharifard, Nadia Safa, Jean-Martin Laberge, Sherif Emil, Pramod Puligandla, Kenneth Shaw, Hussein Wissanji, Eileen Duggan, Elena Guadagno, Maria Consuelo Puentes, Paola Osses Leal, Carolina Mendez Benavente, Michal Rygl, Barbora Trojanová, Klára Berková, Tereza Racková, Ladislav Planka, Jan Škvařil, Radek Štichhauer, Shahad Sabti, Alex Macdonald, Nordeen Bouhadiba, Dorothy Kufeji, Caroline Pardy, Simon Mccluney, Alireza Keshtgar, Rebecca Roberts, Hannah Rhodes, Kate Burns, Robin Garrett-Cox, Kat Ford, Hannah Cornwall, Krithi Ravi, Felicity Arthur, Paul Losty, Tony Lander, Ingo Jester, Suren Arul, Oliver Gee, Giampiero Soccorso, Michael Singh, Max Pachl, Benjamin Martin, Afnan Alzubair, Arun Kelay, Jonathan Sutcliffe, Thomas Middleton, Amy Hughes Thomas, Merina Kurian, Fraser Cameron, Jayaram Sivaraj, Mark C Thomas, Dean Rex, Ceri Jones, Kate Bradshaw, Arnaud Bonnard, Xavier Delforge, Camille Duchesne, Caroline Le Gall, Coralie Defert, Samia Laraqui Hossini, Florent Guerin, Géraldine Hery, Virginie Fouquet-Languillat, Jules Kohaut, Aline Broch, Thomas Blanc, Luke Harper, Thomas Delefortrie, Quentin Ballouhey, Laurent Fourcade, Céline Grosos, Benoit Parmentier, Guillaume Levard, Maria Giovanna Grella, Mariette Renaux Petel, Lucie Grynberg, Olivier Abbo, Sofia Mouttalib, Mélodie Juricic, Aurelien Scalabre, Elodie Haraux, Anke Rissmann, Hardy Krause, Peter Goebel, Ludwig Patzer, Udo Rolle, Andrea Schmedding, Alexandra Antunez-Mora, Bernd Tillig, Sylvester von Bismarck, Patricia Reis Barbosa, Christian Knorr, Domitille Stark, Marco Brunero, Luigi Avolio, Francesco Manni, Matilde Molinelli, Marinella Guazzotti, Alessandro Raffaele, Piero Giovanni Romano, Silvia Cavaiuolo, Gian Battista Parigi, Laszlo Juhasz, Anna Rieth, Arunas Strumila, Rūta Dagilytė, Arunas Liubsys, Pranas Gurskas, Dalius Malcius, Agne Mikneviciute, Asta Vinskaite, Vidmantas Barauskas, Liam Vierboom, Timothy Hall, Spencer Beasley, Lucy Goddard, Mark Stringer, Naveen Weeratunga, Stephen Adams, Jitoko Cama, Marilyn Wong, Sridharan Jayaratnam, Askar Kukkady, Udaya Samarakkody, Sylwester Gerus, Dariusz Patkowski, Agnieszka Wolny, Tomasz Koszutski, Szymon Tobor, Marta Osowicka, Piotr Czauderna, Dariusz Wyrzykowski, Hanna Garnier, Stefan Anzelewicz, Osowicka Marta, Agata Knurowska, Alicja Weiszewsk, Andrzej Grabowski, Wojciech Korlacki, Michal Pasierbek, Przemyslaw Wolak, Aneta Piotrowska, Anna Roszkiewicz, Piotr Kalicińsk, Agata Trypens, Grzegorz Kowalewsk, David Sigalet, Amer Alsaied, Mansour Ali, Ameen Alsaggaf, Alaa Ghallab, Yazeed Owiwi, Ali Zeinelabdeen, Mohamed Fayez, Ahmed Atta, Mazen Zidan, Asaad saleh Radwan, Hanin Shalaby, Reem Abdelbaqi, Khalid Alattas, Yar Kano, Omar Sindi, Abdullah Alshehri, Tariq Altokhais, Fahad Alturki, Mohammad Almosaibli, Dasha Krisanova, Wisam Abbas, Hee-Beom Yang, Hyun-Young Kim, Joong Kee Youn, Jae Hee Chung, Seok Hyeon Cho, In ji Hwang, Ju yeon Lee, Eung song Song, Jenny Arboleda, Mercedes Ruiz de Temiño Bravo, Alexander Siles Hinojosa, Miriam García, Isabel Casal Beloy, Detlef Oliu San Miguel, Maria Elena Molina Vazquez, Verónica Alonso, Alberto Sanchez, Oscar Gomez, Isabel Carrillo, Tomas Wester, Carmen Mesas Burgos, Martin Salö, Erik Omling, Niclas Rudolfson, Christina Granéli, Helena Arnadóttir, Emma Grottling, Kate Abrahamsson, Vladimir Gatzinsky, Michaela Dellenmark Blom, Daniel Borbonet, Paul Puglia, Vinicio Jimenez Morejon, Gaston Acuna, Mario Moraes, Jonathan Chan, Pavan Brahmamdam, Alan Tom, Karen Sherer, Brandy Gonzales, Aaron Cunningham, Sanjay Krishnaswami, Reto Baertschiger, Mary Leech, Regan Williams, Lauren Camp, Ankush Gosain, Maria Mora, Bailey D. Lyttle, Jeremy Chang, Lydia McColl Makepeace, Kathryn L Fowler, Sara Mansfield, Erica Hodgman, Chukwubinyelum Amaechi, Alana Beres, Mark N. Pernik, Luke J. Dosselman, Murad Almasri, Sunil Jain, Varun Modi, Marianelly Fernandez Ferrer, John Coon, Joann Gonzalez, Medhavi Honhar, Nensi Ruzgar, Griffin Coghill, Sarah Ullrich, Maija Cheung, Katrine Løfberg, Jodie Greenberg, Kate Davenport, Samir Gadepalli, Sarah Fox, Stephanie Johnson, Mercedes Pilkington, April Hamilton, Nicole Lin, Juan Sola, Yang Yao, Jenna Kylene Davis, Monica Langer, Jonathan Vacek, Fizan Abdullah, Julie Khlevner, William Middlesworth, Marc Levitt, Hira Ahmad, Sabina M Siddiqui, Alex Bowder, Terry Derks, Afua Amoabin Amoabin, Brooke Pinar, Frank Owusu-Sekyere, Benmanseur Saousen, Rasika Naidoo, Azra Karamustafic, Danielle Paula de Oliveira, Jerhy Andrade, Antonín Šafus, Jason Langley, Alexandra Wilke, Corazone Deya, Habib Mansour Murtadi, Mindaugas Berzanskis, Nwachukwu Calistus, Olalekan S. Ajiboye, Michael Felix, Osagie O Olabisi, Seçil Erçin, Teymursha Muradi, Stephen S. Burks, Sergio Lerma, Jillian Jacobson, Calin Calancea, Rafael Valerio-Vazquez, Guigui Sikwete, Owusu Sekyere, Akhona Mbonisweni, Shahnoor Syed, Cho Seok Hyeon, Fatemeh Pajouhandeh, Sheba Mary Pognaa Kunfah, Global PaedSurg Research Collaboration, and Tıp Fakültesi
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Gastrointestinal Diseases ,Psychological intervention ,Disease ,Global Health ,Specialties, Surgical ,Congenital Abnormalities ,Cohort Studies ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,Developing Countries ,business.industry ,Gastroschisis ,Developed Countries ,Intestinal atresia ,Infant, Newborn ,Gestational age ,Congenital diaphragmatic hernia ,Infant ,Articles ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Atresia ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,business - Abstract
Summary Background Congenital anomalies are the fifth leading cause of mortality in children younger than 5 years globally. Many gastrointestinal congenital anomalies are fatal without timely access to neonatal surgical care, but few studies have been done on these conditions in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). We compared outcomes of the seven most common gastrointestinal congenital anomalies in low-income, middle-income, and high-income countries globally, and identified factors associated with mortality. Methods We did a multicentre, international prospective cohort study of patients younger than 16 years, presenting to hospital for the first time with oesophageal atresia, congenital diaphragmatic hernia, intestinal atresia, gastroschisis, exomphalos, anorectal malformation, and Hirschsprung's disease. Recruitment was of consecutive patients for a minimum of 1 month between October, 2018, and April, 2019. We collected data on patient demographics, clinical status, interventions, and outcomes using the REDCap platform. Patients were followed up for 30 days after primary intervention, or 30 days after admission if they did not receive an intervention. The primary outcome was all-cause, in-hospital mortality for all conditions combined and each condition individually, stratified by country income status. We did a complete case analysis. Findings We included 3849 patients with 3975 study conditions (560 with oesophageal atresia, 448 with congenital diaphragmatic hernia, 681 with intestinal atresia, 453 with gastroschisis, 325 with exomphalos, 991 with anorectal malformation, and 517 with Hirschsprung's disease) from 264 hospitals (89 in high-income countries, 166 in middle-income countries, and nine in low-income countries) in 74 countries. Of the 3849 patients, 2231 (58·0%) were male. Median gestational age at birth was 38 weeks (IQR 36–39) and median bodyweight at presentation was 2·8 kg (2·3–3·3). Mortality among all patients was 37 (39·8%) of 93 in low-income countries, 583 (20·4%) of 2860 in middle-income countries, and 50 (5·6%) of 896 in high-income countries (p
- Published
- 2020
30. Differential Activation of Immune Effector Processes in Mature Compared to Immature Sacrococcygeal Teratomas
- Author
-
Jenny Karlsson, Mette Hambraeus, Lars Hagander, Ioanna Kasselaki, Catharina Hagerling, and David Gisselsson
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,030105 genetics & heredity ,Genome ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Gene expression ,Exome Sequencing ,Medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Genotyping ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Immune effector ,business.industry ,Sacrococcygeal Region ,Teratoma ,RNA ,General Medicine ,DNA ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cancer research ,business ,Sacrococcygeal teratoma - Abstract
This study aims to characterize the molecular signatures of sacrococcygeal teratomas (SCTs). Methods: Three SCTs were analyzed with whole genome genotyping. RNA sequencing of 10 SCTs dominated by m...
- Published
- 2020
31. Association of transport time with adverse outcome in paediatric trauma
- Author
-
Helen, Träff, Lars, Hagander, and Martin, Salö
- Subjects
Sweden ,Injury Severity Score ,AcademicSubjects/MED00910 ,Humans ,Original Article ,Registries ,Child ,AcademicSubjects/MED00010 ,Hospitals ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Background It is unclear how the length of prehospital transport time affects outcome in paediatric trauma. This study evaluated the association of transport time from alarm to arrival at hospital with adverse outcome in paediatric trauma patients in Sweden. Methods This was a retrospective study based on prospectively collected data from the Swedish trauma registry between 2012 and 2019 of children less than 18 years with major trauma (New Injury Severity Score (NISS) greater than 15). The primary outcome was 30-day mortality, and secondary outcomes were emergency interventions (e.g., chest tube or laparotomy) and low functional outcome (Glasgow Outcome Scale 2–3). Primary exposure was transport time from alarm to arrival at hospital. Co-variables in multivariable regressions were gender, age, ASA score before injury, injury intention, dominant injury type, NISS, Glasgow Coma Scale score, prehospital competence and hospital level. Results Among 597 patients, 30-day mortality was 9.8 per cent, emergency interventions were performed in 34.7 per cent and low functional outcome was registered in 15.9 per cent. Median transport time was 51 (i.q.r. 37–68) minutes. After adjustment for patient, injury and hospital characteristics, no association between longer transport time and 30-day mortality, frequency of emergency interventions or lower functional outcome could be found. Treatment at a university hospital was associated with a lower risk for 30-day mortality (odds ratio 0.23 (95 per cent c.i. 0.08 to 0.68), P = 0.008). Conclusion Longer transport time after major paediatric trauma was not associated with adverse outcome. Hence, it seems that longer transport distances should not be an obstacle against centralization of paediatric trauma care. Further studies should focus on the role of prehospital competence and other transport-associated parameters and their association with adverse outcome., The aim of the study was to evaluate the association of transport time with adverse outcome in pediatric trauma patients in Sweden, using a prospective trauma registry including children with major trauma. The median transport time from alarm to hospital was 51 minutes, and among 597 patients 30-day mortality was 10%, emergency interventions were performed in 35% and low functional outcome was registered in 16%. After adjustment for possible covariates, the results showed that longer transport time after major pediatric trauma was not associated with a higher 30-day mortality, a higher rate of emergency interventions or lower functional outcome.
- Published
- 2020
32. Clinical Prediction Scores for Pediatric Appendicitis
- Author
-
Martin Salö, Emma Marklund, Johanna Gudjonsdottir, and Lars Hagander
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Diagnostic accuracy ,Risk Assessment ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Severity of Illness Index ,Internal medicine ,Clinical Decision Rules ,False positive paradox ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pediatric appendicitis ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Appendicitis ,Predictive value ,Alvarado score ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Surgery ,Female ,Suspected appendicitis ,business - Abstract
Introduction The rate of misdiagnosis of appendicitis in children is a challenge and clinical prediction scores could be part of the solution. However, the pediatric appendicitis score (PAS) and the Alvarado score have shown disappointing diagnostic accuracy in pediatric validation studies, while the appendicitis inflammatory response (AIR) score and the novel pediatric appendicitis risk calculator (pARC) have not yet been validated thoroughly. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to evaluate these four prediction scores prospectively in children with suspected appendicitis. Materials and Methods A prospective study was conducted over a 2-year period. All patients Results Of the 318 patients included, 151 (47 %) patients had appendicitis. The AIR score and the pARC had substantially higher specificity and positive predictive value, and lower rate of false positives (7% and 2%), than the PAS and Alvarado score (36 and 28%, p Conclusion The AIR score and the pARC are superior to the PAS and Alvarado score in diagnosing children with suspected appendicitis.
- Published
- 2020
33. How boys and testicles wander to surgery: a nationwide cohort study of surgical delay in Sweden
- Author
-
Erik, Omling, Sanna, Bergbrant, Andreas, Persson, Jonas, Björk, and Lars, Hagander
- Subjects
epidemiology ,Paediatric Surgery ,health services research - Abstract
Background Early orchidopexy is recommended for cryptorchidism and the surgery is increasingly centralised. The objectives were to determine the incidence, risk factors and if distance to treating hospital impacted on timely treatment of cryptorchidism. Methods In this observational study, all boys born in Sweden from 2001 to 2014 were followed in national registers to determine the incidence of cryptorchidism by levels of birth-related risk factors and social determinants. Travel time to hospital was used as the primary exposure in multivariable survival analysis, with age at surgery as main outcome. Results Of 748 678 boys at risk for cryptorchidism, 7351 were treated and evaluated for timing of surgery (cumulative childhood incidence 1.4%, 95% CI 1.3% to 1.5%). The incidence was clearly associated with prematurity and overdue pregnancy (HR for 41 weeks HR 1.19 (95% CI 1.10 to 1.29)), low birth weight (
- Published
- 2020
34. Health-related quality of life and scar satisfaction in a cohort of children operated on for sacrococcygeal teratoma
- Author
-
Lars Hagander, Anna Börjesson, Mette Hambraeus, Einar Arnbjörnsson, and Pernilla Stenström
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Scar assessment ,Health-related quality of life ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Cohort Studies ,Cicatrix ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Scar ,030225 pediatrics ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Children ,Quality of Life Research ,Sweden ,Health related quality of life ,Sacrococcygeal Region ,business.industry ,Research ,Teratoma ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,University hospital ,Comorbidity ,Patient Satisfaction ,Child, Preschool ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,Quality of Life ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Sacrococcygeal teratoma ,Female ,business - Abstract
Aim The aims of this study were to evaluate health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in children with sacrococcygeal teratoma and to explore the effect of the scar on physical, emotional and behavioral aspects. Methods A cohort of children operated on for sacrococcygeal teratoma between 2000 and 2013 at Lund University Hospital, Sweden, and their parents were interviewed. HRQoL was evaluated with PedsQL, and scar satisfaction was estimated through Patient Observer Scar Assessment Score (POSA). Results All eligible children (n = 17) were included (100% response rate). Median age was 7.3 years (range 3.5–16.0). Mean total PedsQL score was 92.3 (range 72.0 to 99.0). Patients with comorbidity scored lower (87.5) than those without (95.0) (p 8 years. No children reported that they avoided situations due to the scar, and most (80% of children and 90% of parents) reported absent or only mild negative emotions when considering the scar. Conclusion Children with sacrococcygeal teratoma had a good overall HRQoL, but comorbidity reduced the outcome. A few children reported scar-related impact on physical, behavioral and emotional aspects.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Immediate and long-term impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on delivery of surgical services
- Author
-
Julie Hallet, Paul B.S. Lai, Lars Hagander, Kjetil Søreide, Dario Callegaro, John G. Meara, Nancy N. Baxter, Shelley G. Warner, Catherine Teh, Pål-Dag Line, Javier Otero, Andreas A. Schnitzbauer, Joshua S Ng-Kamstra, Laura Lorenzon, and Jeffrey B. Matthews
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Collateral ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Population ,MEDLINE ,Reviews ,Review ,030230 surgery ,Global Health ,Perioperative Care ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Correspondence ,Pandemic ,Global health ,Infection control ,Medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,General ,education ,Pandemics ,education.field_of_study ,Contingency plan ,Infection Control ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,covid 19 ,COVID-19 ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Term (time) ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Surgery ,Medical emergency ,AcademicSubjects/MED00010 ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
Background The ongoing pandemic is having a collateral health effect on delivery of surgical care to millions of patients. Very little is known about pandemic management and effects on other services, including delivery of surgery. Methods This was a scoping review of all available literature pertaining to COVID‐19 and surgery, using electronic databases, society websites, webinars and preprint repositories. Results Several perioperative guidelines have been issued within a short time. Many suggestions are contradictory and based on anecdotal data at best. As regions with the highest volume of operations per capita are being hit, an unprecedented number of operations are being cancelled or deferred. No major stakeholder seems to have considered how a pandemic deprives patients with a surgical condition of resources, with patients disproportionally affected owing to the nature of treatment (use of anaesthesia, operating rooms, protective equipment, physical invasion and need for perioperative care). No recommendations exist regarding how to reopen surgical delivery. The postpandemic evaluation and future planning should involve surgical services as an essential part to maintain appropriate surgical care for the population during an outbreak. Surgical delivery, owing to its cross‐cutting nature and synergistic effects on health systems at large, needs to be built into the WHO agenda for national health planning. Conclusion Patients are being deprived of surgical access, with uncertain loss of function and risk of adverse prognosis as a collateral effect of the pandemic. Surgical services need a contingency plan for maintaining surgical care in an ongoing or postpandemic phase., Surgical services are adapting to mitigate the surge in patients with COVID‐19 in need of critical care support. All non‐essential elective surgery has been cancelled, or is pending cancellation, in healthcare systems around the globe, impacting millions of patients. The postpandemic phase will require re‐establishment of surgical services, and capacity building to restore normalcy and to appropriately reduce the backlog of cases by priority. A framework for evaluation and a plan to incorporate surgical care into the WHO strategies for national health plans and pandemic mitigation is urgently needed. Preparing for the next wave
- Published
- 2020
36. Sustainable care for children with cancer: a Lancet Oncology Commission
- Author
-
Claude Moreira, Karen J. Marcus, Claudia Allemani, Tezer Kutluk, Rifat Atun, Kathy Pritchard-Jones, Elizabeth J. A. Fitchett, Federico Antillon, Michel P Coleman, Eric Bouffet, Ronald D. Barr, Lars Hagander, Sumit Gupta, Shripad Banavali, Zachary J. Ward, Fabio Girardi, Leslie L. Robison, Thomas G. Gross, Freddie Bray, Jaime Shalkow, Agnes Binagwaho, A. Lindsay Frazier, Soad Fuentes-Alabi, Carlos Rodriguez-Galindo, Paola Friedrich, Ruth I. Hoffman, Jennifer M. Yeh, Oscar Ramirez, Patricia Alcasabas, Catherine G. Lam, Richard Sullivan, Nickhill Bhakta, Susan Horton, Joanne F. Aitken, Eva Steliarova-Foucher, Veronica Di Carlo, Eva M. Loucaides, Avram Denburg, Lorna Renner, Ramandeep Singh Arora, Lillian Sung, Julia Challinor, Cristian A Herrera, and Allen Eng Juh Yeoh
- Subjects
Referral ,Childhood cancer ,Psychological intervention ,Developing country ,Commission ,Health Services Accessibility ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cost of Illness ,Environmental health ,Neoplasms ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Productivity ,Developing Countries ,health care economics and organizations ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Health Care Costs ,medicine.disease ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business - Abstract
We estimate that there will be 13·7 million new cases of childhood cancer globally between 2020 and 2050. At current levels of health system performance (including access and referral), 6·1 million (44·9%) of these children will be undiagnosed. Between 2020 and 2050, 11·1 million children will die from cancer if no additional investments are made to improve access to health-care services or childhood cancer treatment. Of this total, 9·3 million children (84·1%) will be in low-income and lower-middle-income countries. This burden could be vastly reduced with new funding to scale up cost-effective interventions. Simultaneous comprehensive scale-up of interventions could avert 6·2 million deaths in children with cancer in this period, more than half (56·1%) of the total number of deaths otherwise projected. Taking excess mortality risk into consideration, this reduction in the number of deaths is projected to produce a gain of 318 million life-years. In addition, the global lifetime productivity gains of US$2580 billion in 2020–50 would be four times greater than the cumulative treatment costs of $594 billion, producing a net benefit of $1986 billion on the global investment: a net return of $3 for every $1 invested. In sum, the burden of childhood cancer, which has been grossly underestimated in the past, can be effectively diminished to realise massive health and economic benefits and to avert millions of needless deaths.
- Published
- 2020
37. The need to collect, aggregate, and analyze global anesthesia and surgery data
- Author
-
Magdalena Gruendl, P. Niclas Broer, David Ljungman, Emmanuel Makasa, Sabrina Juran, Mark G. Shrime, Gregory L Peck, Stephanie J Klug, Jose Miguel Guzman, Lars Hagander, Justine Davies, John G. Meara, Adrian W. Gelb, Hampus Holmer, Isobel H Marks, and Walter D. Johnson
- Subjects
Sustainable development ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Data collection ,business.industry ,030231 tropical medicine ,Aggregate (data warehouse) ,Psychological intervention ,General Medicine ,Information overload ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Treatment modality ,Anesthesia ,Health care ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Healthcare system - Abstract
In the Sustainable Development Goals era, there is a new awareness of the need for an integrated approach to healthcare interventions and a strong commitment to Universal Health Coverage. To achieve the goal of strengthening entire health systems, surgery, as a crosscutting treatment modality, is indispensable. For any health system strengthening exercise, baseline data and longitudinal monitoring of progress are necessary. With improved data capabilities, there are unparalleled possibilities to map out and understand systems, integrating data from many sources and sectors. Nevertheless, there is also a need to prioritize among indicators to avoid information overload and data collection fatigue. There is a similar need to define indicators and collection methodology to create standardized and comparable data. Finally, there is a need to establish data pathways to ensure clear responsibilities amongst national and international institutions and integrate surgical metrics into existing mechanisms for sustainable data collection. This is a call to collect, aggregate, and analyze global anesthesia and surgery data, with an account of existing data sources and a proposed way forward.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Population‐based incidence rate of inpatient and outpatient surgical procedures in a high‐income country
- Author
-
John A. Rose, Anton Jarnheimer, Erik Omling, John G. Meara, Jonas Björk, and Lars Hagander
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Outpatient surgery ,Population ,Disease ,030230 surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Age Distribution ,Ambulatory care ,Health care ,medicine ,Income country ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Registries ,Sex Distribution ,education ,Child ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Sweden ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Public health ,Developed Countries ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Original Articles ,Middle Aged ,Hospitalization ,Ambulatory Surgical Procedures ,Child, Preschool ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,Surgery ,Original Article ,Female ,business ,Needs Assessment ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background The WHO and the World Bank ask countries to report the national volume of surgery. This report describes these data for Sweden, a high‐income country. Methods In an 8‐year population‐based observational cohort study, all inpatient and outpatient care in the public and private sectors was detected in the Swedish National Patient Register and screened for the occurrence of surgery. The entire Swedish population was eligible for inclusion. All patients attending healthcare for any disease were included. Incidence rates of surgery and likelihood of surgery were calculated, with trends over time, and correlation with sex, age and disease category. Results Almost one in three hospitalizations involved a surgical procedure (30·6 per cent). The incidence rate of surgery exceeded 17 480 operations per 100 000 person‐years, and at least 58·5 per cent of all surgery was performed in an outpatient setting (range 58·5 to 71·6 per cent). Incidence rates of surgery increased every year by 5·2 (95 per cent c.i. 4·2 to 6·1) per cent (P, Higher than previously reported
- Published
- 2017
39. The Met Needs for Pediatric Surgical Conditions in Sierra Leone: Estimating the Gap
- Author
-
Lars Hagander, Donald Bash-Taqi, Håkon A. Bolkan, Carmen Mesas Burgos, and Johan Von Screeb
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Original Scientific Report ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hernia, Inguinal ,Sierra Leone ,Sierra leone ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pediatric surgery ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Pediatric Surgical Procedures ,Herniorrhaphy ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Correction ,Vascular surgery ,medicine.disease ,Hernia repair ,Inguinal hernia ,Cardiothoracic surgery ,Child, Preschool ,Health Care Surveys ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Optometry ,Female ,Surgery ,business ,Needs Assessment ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
BackgroundIn low- and middle-income countries, there is a gap between the need for surgery and its equitable provision, and a lack of proxy indicators to estimate this gap. Sierra Leone is a West African country with close to three million children. It is unknown to what extent the surgical needs of these children are met.AimTo describe a nationwide provision of pediatric surgical procedures and to assess pediatric hernia repair as a proxy indicator for the shortage of surgical care in the pediatric population in Sierra Leone.MethodsWe analyzed results from a nationwide facility survey in Sierra Leone that collected data on surgical procedures from operation and anesthesia logbooks in all facilities performing surgery. We included data on all patients under the age of 16 years undergoing surgery. Primary outcomes were rate and volume of surgical procedures. We calculated the expected number of inguinal hernia in children and estimated the unmet need for hernia repair.ResultsIn 2012, a total of 2381 pediatric surgical procedures were performed in Sierra Leone. The rate of pediatric surgical procedures was 84 per 100,000 children 0–15 years of age. The most common pediatric surgical procedure was hernia repair (18%), corresponding to a rate of 16 per 100,000 children 0–15 years of age. The estimated unmet need for inguinal hernia repair was 88%.ConclusionsThe rate of pediatric surgery in Sierra Leone was very low, and inguinal hernia was the single most common procedure noted among children in Sierra Leone.
- Published
- 2017
40. Measuring the migration of surgical specialists
- Author
-
Adam Lantz, Lars Hagander, Walter D. Johnson, Russell L. Gruen, David A. K. Watters, Samuel R.G. Finlayson, Hampus Holmer, and Thomas C. Ricketts
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,MEDLINE ,030230 surgery ,Surgical workforce ,World health ,Specialties, Surgical ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Health Workforce ,South east asian ,Developing Countries ,Surgeons ,business.industry ,Developed Countries ,Emigration and Immigration ,Country of origin ,Emigration ,Anesthesiologists ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Workforce ,Income ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
Background The lack of access to essential surgical care in low-income countries is aggravated by emigration of locally-trained surgical specialists to more affluent regions. Yet, the global diaspora of surgeons, obstetricians, and anesthesiologists from low-income and middle-income countries has never been fully described and compared with those who have remained in their country of origin. It is also unclear whether the surgical workforce is more affected by international migration than other medical specialists. In this study, we aimed to quantify the proportion of surgical specialists originating from low-income and middle-income countries that currently work in high-income countries. Methods We retrieved surgical workforce data from 48 high-income countries and 102 low-income and middle-income countries using the database of the World Health Organization Global Surgical Workforce. We then compared this domestic workforce with more granular data on the country of initial medical qualification of all surgeons, anesthesiologists, and obstetricians made available for 14 selected high-income countries to calculate the proportion of surgical specialists working abroad. Results We identified 1,118,804 specialist surgeons, anesthesiologists, or obstetricians from 102 low-income and middle-income countries, of whom 33,021 (3.0%) worked in the 14 included high-income countries. The proportion of surgical specialists abroad was greatest for the African and South East Asian regions (12.8% and 12.1%). The proportion of specialists abroad was not greater for surgeons, anesthesiologists, or obstetricians than for physicians and other medical specialists (P = .465). Overall, the countries with the lowest remaining density of surgical specialists were also the countries from which the largest proportion of graduates were now working in high-income countries (P = .011). Conclusion A substantial proportion of all surgeons, anesthesiologists, and obstetricians from low-income and middle-income countries currently work in high-income countries. In addition to decreasing migration from areas of surgical need, innovative strategies to retain and strengthen the surgical workforce could involve engaging this large international pool of surgical specialists and instructors.
- Published
- 2019
41. Hyponatraemia despite isotonic maintenance fluid therapy: a time series intervention study
- Author
-
Milan, Chromek, Åsa, Jungner, Niclas, Rudolfson, David, Ley, Detlef, Bockenhauer, and Lars, Hagander
- Subjects
general paediatrics ,nephrology ,paediatric surgery ,Original Research - Abstract
Objective To examine the prevalence of dysnatraemias among children admitted for paediatric surgery before and after a change from hypotonic to isotonic intravenous maintenance fluid therapy. Design Retrospective consecutive time series intervention study. Setting Paediatric surgery ward at the Children’s Hospital in Lund, during a 7-year period, 2010–2017. Patients All children with a blood sodium concentration measurement during the study period were included. Hypotonic maintenance fluid (40 mmol/L NaCl and 20 mmol/L KCl) was used during the first 3 years of the study (646 patients), and isotonic solution (140 mmol/L NaCl and 20 mmol/L KCl) was used during the following period (807 patients). Main outcome measures Primary outcomes were sodium concentration and occurrence of hyponatraemia (145 mmol/L). Results Overall, the change from hypotonic to isotonic intravenous maintenance fluid therapy was associated with a decreased prevalence of hyponatraemia from 29% to 22% (adjusted OR 0.65 (0.51–0.82)) without a significantly increased odds for hypernatraemia (from 3.4% to 4.3%, adjusted OR 1.2 (0.71–2.1)). Hyponatraemia
- Published
- 2019
42. The rate and perioperative mortality of caesarean section in Sierra Leone
- Author
-
Stefan R. Hansson, Fatu Forna, Sulaiman Conteh, Michael M. Koroma, Binyam Hailu, Lars Hagander, Aalke Johan van Duinen, Hampus Holmer, Santigie Sesay, Michael M. Kamara, Alimamy P. Koroma, Jerker Liljestrand, H. Lonnée, and Håkon A. Bolkan
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Medicine (General) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,maternal health ,Sierra leone ,surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,R5-920 ,medicine ,Caesarean section ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,education.field_of_study ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Obstructed labour ,obstetrics ,business.industry ,Obstetrics ,Health Policy ,Mortality rate ,Research ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Uterine rupture ,Maternal death ,business - Abstract
Introduction Sierra Leone has the world’s highest maternal mortality, partly due to low access to caesarean section. Limited data are available to guide improvement. In this study, we aimed to analyse the rate and mortality of caesarean sections in the country. Methods We conducted a retrospective study of all caesarean sections and all reported in-facility maternal deaths in Sierra Leone in 2016. All facilities performing caesarean sections were visited. Data on in-facility maternal deaths were retrieved from the Maternal Death Surveillance and Response database. Caesarean section mortality was defined as in-facility perioperative mortality. Results In 2016, there were 7357 caesarean sections in Sierra Leone. This yields a population rate of 2.9% of all live births, a 35% increase from 2012, with district rates ranging from 0.4% to 5.2%. The most common indications for surgery were obstructed labour (42%), hypertensive disorders (25%) and haemorrhage (22%). Ninety-nine deaths occurred during or after caesarean section, and the in-facility perioperative caesarean section mortality rate was 1.5% (median 0.7%, IQR 0–2.2). Haemorrhage was the leading cause of death (73%), and of those who died during or after surgery, 80% had general anaesthesia, 75% received blood transfusion and 22% had a uterine rupture diagnosed. Conclusions The caesarean section rate has increased rapidly in Sierra Leone, but the distribution remains uneven. Caesarean section mortality is high, but there is wide variation. More access to caesarean sections for maternal and neonatal complications is needed in underserved areas, and expansion should be coupled with efforts to limit late presentation, to offer assisted vaginal delivery when indicated and to ensure optimal perioperative care. This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
- Published
- 2019
43. Adherence to childhood cancer treatment: a prospective cohort study from Northern Vietnam
- Author
-
Thomas Wiebe, Jacek Toporski, Anders Castor, Lars Hagander, Christian Moëll, and Bui Ngoc Lan
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Medicine ,Logistic regression ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Neoplasms ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,Curative care ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Public health ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Research ,lcsh:R ,public health ,Cancer ,Infant ,Paediatrics ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Vietnam ,paediatric oncology ,Child, Preschool ,Abandonment (emotional) ,Patient Compliance ,paediatric surgery ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Demography - Abstract
ObjectivesGlobal incidence and attention to childhood cancer is increasing and treatment abandonment is a major cause of treatment failure in low- and middle-income countries. The purpose of this study was to gain an understanding of factors contributing to non-adherence to treatment.DesignA prospective cohort study with 2 year follow-up of incidence, family-reported motives and risk factors.SettingThe largest tertiary paediatric oncology centre in Northern Vietnam.ParticipantsAll children offered curative cancer treatment, from January 2008 to December 2009.Primary and secondary outcome measuresFamily decision to start treatment was analysed with multivariable logistic regression, and family decision to continue treatment was analysed with a multivariable Cox model. This assessment of non-adherence is thereby methodologically consistent with the accepted definitions and recommended practices for evaluation of treatment abandonment.ResultsAmong 731 consecutively admitted patients, 677 were eligible for treatment and were followed for a maximum 2 years. Almost half the parents chose to decline curative care (45.5%), either before (35.2%) or during (10.3%) the course of treatment. Most parents reported perceived poor prognosis as the main reason for non-adherence, followed by financial constraints and traditional medicine preference. The odds of starting treatment increased throughout the study-period (OR 1.04 per month (1.01 to 1.07), p=0.002), and were independently associated with prognosis (OR 0.51 (0.41 to 0.64), p=ConclusionsNon-adherence influenced the prognosis of childhood cancer, and was associated with cultural and local perceptions of cancer and the economic power of the affected families. Prevention of abandonment is a prerequisite for successful cancer care, and a crucial early step in quality improvements to care for all children with cancer.
- Published
- 2019
44. Evaluating the collection, comparability and findings of six global surgery indicators
- Author
-
Abebe Bekele, Lisa M. Knowlton, P Kamali, I.H. Marks, Andrew J M Leather, Joshua S Ng-Kamstra, Mark G. Shrime, M.A. Khan, Lars Hagander, Kjetil Søreide, Ewen M Harrison, John G. Meara, Martin Smith, Justine Davies, Hampus Holmer, and Thomas G. Weiser
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,MEDLINE ,030230 surgery ,Global Health ,World Health Organization ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physicians ,Global health ,Medicine ,Humans ,Imputation (statistics) ,education ,Quality Indicators, Health Care ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Public health ,Comparability ,Perioperative ,Original Articles ,Surgery ,General Surgery ,Workforce ,Original Article ,business - Abstract
Background In 2015, six indicators were proposed to evaluate global progress towards access to safe, affordable and timely surgical and anaesthesia care. Although some have been adopted as core global health indicators, none has been evaluated systematically. The aims of this study were to assess the availability, comparability and utility of the indicators, and to present available data and updated estimates. Methods Nationally representative data were compiled for all World Health Organization (WHO) member states from 2010 to 2016 through contacts with official bodies and review of the published and grey literature, and available databases. Availability, comparability and utility were assessed for each indicator: access to timely essential surgery, specialist surgical workforce density, surgical volume, perioperative mortality, and protection against impoverishing and catastrophic expenditure. Where feasible, imputation models were developed to generate global estimates. Results Of all WHO member states, 19 had data on the proportion of the population within 2h of a surgical facility, 154 had data on workforce density, 72 reported number of procedures, and nine had perioperative mortality data, but none could report data on catastrophic or impoverishing expenditure. Comparability and utility were variable, and largely dependent on different definitions used. There were sufficient data to estimate that worldwide, in 2015, there were 2 038 947 (i.q.r. 1 884 916–2 281 776) surgeons, obstetricians and anaesthetists, and 266·1 (95 per cent c.i. 220·1 to 344·4) million operations performed. Conclusion Surgical and anaesthesia indicators are increasingly being adopted by the global health community, but data availability remains low. Comparability and utility for all indicators require further resolution., This paper examines the availability, comparability and utility of six global surgery indicators. Surgical and anaesthesia indicators are increasingly being adopted by the global health community, but data availability remains low. Comparability and utility for all indicators require further resolution. An update, and a plea for improvement
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Caesarean section performed by medical doctors and associate clinicians in Sierra Leone
- Author
-
Michael M. Kamara, Øyvind Salvesen, Andrew J M Leather, Arne Wibe, M. Elhassein, Lars Hagander, Thomas Ashley, Alimamy P. Koroma, Elisabeth Darj, Håkon A. Bolkan, and A J van Duinen
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Allied Health Personnel ,030230 surgery ,Sierra leone ,Sierra Leone ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Physicians ,medicine ,Humans ,Caesarean section ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Keisersnitt ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,business.industry ,Cesarean Section ,Infant, Newborn ,Pregnancy Outcome ,Odds ratio ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Hospitals ,Maternal Mortality ,Midical sciences: 700 [VDP] ,Emergency medicine ,Surgery ,Maternal death ,Observational study ,Original Article ,Female ,business ,Cesarean section ,Medisinske fag: 700 [VDP] - Abstract
Background Many countries lack sufficient medical doctors to provide safe and affordable surgical and emergency obstetric care. Task-sharing with associate clinicians (ACs) has been suggested to fill this gap. The aim of this study was to assess maternal and neonatal outcomes of caesarean sections performed by ACs and doctors. Methods All nine hospitals in Sierra Leone where both ACs and doctors performed caesarean sections were included in this prospective observational multicentre non-inferiority study. Patients undergoing caesarean section were followed for 30 days. The primary outcome was maternal mortality, and secondary outcomes were perinatal events and maternal morbidity. Results Between October 2016 and May 2017, 1282 patients were enrolled in the study. In total, 1161 patients (90·6 per cent) were followed up with a home visit at 30 days. Data for 1274 caesarean sections were analysed, 443 performed by ACs and 831 by doctors. Twin pregnancies were more frequently treated by ACs, whereas doctors performed a higher proportion of operations outside office hours. There was one maternal death in the AC group and 15 in the doctor group (crude odds ratio (OR) 0·12, 90 per cent confidence interval 0·01 to 0·67). There were fewer stillbirths in the AC group (OR 0·74, 0·56 to 0·98), but patients were readmitted twice as often (OR 2·17, 1·08 to 4·42). Conclusion Caesarean sections performed by ACs are not inferior to those undertaken by doctors. Task-sharing can be a safe strategy to improve access to emergency surgical care in areas where there is a shortage of doctors.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Sacrococcygeal teratoma: A population-based study of incidence and prenatal prognostic factors
- Author
-
Kjell Å. Salvesen, Anna Börjesson, Einar Arnbjörnsson, Mette Hambraeus, and Lars Hagander
- Subjects
Male ,Polyhydramnios ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coccyx ,Ultrasonography, Prenatal ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,Sweden ,Spinal Neoplasms ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Sacrococcygeal Region ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Infant, Newborn ,Teratoma ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,surgical procedures, operative ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Child, Preschool ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Surgery ,Sacrococcygeal teratoma ,business ,therapeutics ,human activities ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Sacrococcygeal teratoma (SCT) is a rare congenital tumor associated with high rates of perinatal mortality and morbidity. This study evaluated the incidence, prenatal detection rate, and early predictors of a complicated outcome following diagnosis of SCT.We retrospectively identified all fetuses and newborns diagnosed with SCT in southern Sweden from 2000 to 2013. Prenatal sonograms, charts, and pathology reports were reviewed and analyzed. Each case of SCT was defined as complicated or uncomplicated based on the postnatal outcome. All cases with a fatal outcome or that required cardiac resuscitation during birth or surgery were classified as complicated.The overall incidence of SCT was 1:13,982 (19 children in a cohort of 265,658 live births). A prenatal diagnosis was made in 74% of cases, there were no stillbirths or intrauterine deaths, and the overall mortality rate was 11%. Four cases of SCT (21%) were classified as complicated, and these cases had a significantly larger tumor size at gestational week 20 (P=0.048), had a significantly higher tumor growth rate (P=0.003), and were more often associated with polyhydramnios (P=0.01), and mainly solid/mixed morphology (P=0.001).The incidence of SCT in southern Sweden was higher than those reported in most previous studies; however, the associated mortality rate was relatively low. Fetuses with large tumors, rapidly growing tumors, and polyhydramnios were more likely to experience a complicated outcome during the postnatal period.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Surgical Workforce and Surgical Provider Productivity in Sierra Leone: A Countrywide Inventory
- Author
-
Johan von Schreeb, Thaim B. Kamara, Håkon A. Bolkan, Øyvind Salvesen, Donald Bash-Taqi, Lars Hagander, and Arne Wibe
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Scope of practice ,Original Scientific Report ,Nurses ,Developing country ,Efficiency ,Surgical workforce ,Article ,Sierra leone ,Sierra Leone ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Urban Health Services ,medicine ,Humans ,Operations management ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Productivity ,Developing Countries ,Surgeons ,business.industry ,Vascular surgery ,Hospitals ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Workforce ,Surgery ,Rural Health Services ,business ,Needs Assessment ,Specialization - Abstract
Background Limited data exist on surgical providers and their scope of practice in low-income countries (LICs). The aim of this study was to assess the distribution and productivity of all surgical providers in an LIC, and to evaluate correlations between the surgical workforce availability, productivity, rates, and volume of surgery at the district and hospital levels. Methods Data on surgeries and surgical providers from 56 (93.3 %) out of 60 healthcare facilities providing surgery in Sierra Leone in 2012 were retrieved between January and May 2013 from operation theater logbooks and through interviews with key informants. Results The Sierra Leonean surgical workforce consisted of 164 full-time positions, equal to 2.7 surgical providers/100,000 inhabitants. Non-specialists performed 52.8 % of all surgeries. In rural areas, the densities of specialists and physicians were 26.8 and 6.3 times lower, respectively, compared with urban areas. The average individual productivity was 2.8 surgeries per week, and varied considerably between the cadres of surgical providers and locations. When excluding four centers that only performed ophthalmic surgery, there was a positive correlation between a facility’s volume of surgery and the productivity of its surgical providers (rs = 0.642, p
- Published
- 2016
48. A realized vision of access to safe, affordable surgical and anaesthesia care
- Author
-
Lars Hagander and Andrew J M Leather
- Subjects
business.industry ,030230 surgery ,medicine.disease ,Global Health ,Health Services Accessibility ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesiology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,General Surgery ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Medicine ,Humans ,Surgery ,Anesthesia ,Medical emergency ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,Quality of Health Care - Abstract
Where is the funding?In April 2015, the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery set out a vision for universal access to safe, affordable surgical and anaesthesia care when needed1. Despite policy progress and a global surge of interest in perioperative public health, the Commission blueprint remains an unfinished agenda. This welcome special BJS supplement on global surgery presents an opportunity to reflect on the lessons learned as a surgical community – with a focus on research, engagement, funding and realized vision.The Commission articulated a broad array of research themes, seven of which are found within the breadth of papers in this supplement including: policy2, quality and safety3, 4, training and education5-8, partnership6, 7, 9, information management10-12, care delivery innovation13 and burden14. However, there are four important themes that are not covered, including cost and finance, determinants and barriers, impact of disease and prevention. An even broader interdisciplinary research focus is urgently required to address questions related to the whole health system as well as political, social and economic determinants of health for patients with surgical conditions.The startling evidence that five billion people lack access to safe and affordable surgery and anaesthesia care is perhaps the most quoted of the Commission's key messages1. The healthcare delivery and management group explored patient barriers to surgical care, and promoted three bellwether procedures as signals of a functional surgical ecosystem at the level of district hospitals (caesarean section, emergency laparotomy and open fracture care). The workforce, training and education group proposed a density of at least 20 specialist providers per 100 000 population, and illustrated the dearth and global maldistribution of human resources. The economics and finance group described how surgical patients worldwide are trapped in iatrogenic poverty while needle and thread are as cost‐effective as immunizations, and that return on investments for surgery and anaesthesia would translate into considerable Gross Domestic Product losses averted. The metrics group drew up the six Lancet Commission indicators, designed to capture preparedness, delivery, and the effect of surgical and anaesthesia care with clear time‐bound targets for scale up to 2030. The Commission report concluded with a call for national surgical plans and an appraisal of global surgery research. Overall, the report aligned with health system strengthening and embedded surgery within universal health coverage.Building on the work of many individuals and organizations, the Commission facilitated global surgery progress with multiple partners across more than 100 countries. The escalating emergence of leaders, new networks and changing focus of organizations is encouraging. Key events to highlight include: Denis Mukwege winning the Nobel Prize for humanitarian surgery; Emmanuel Makasa spearheading the unanimously passed World Health Assembly resolution 68.15 on the crucial role of surgery and anaesthesia for universal health coverage15; and John Meara championing national surgical plans through intelligent, collaborative partnership. In addition, media and civil society are maintaining pressure on global surgical issues; guiding institutions such as the World Federation of Societies of Anaesthesiologists and the College of Surgeons in East, Central and Southern Africa have made significant contributions to workforce data; new collaborations, including the Global Initiative for Children's Surgery and InciSioN (the International Student Surgical Network), have been launched; research funders have awarded grants for global surgical research; and regional colleges and specialist associations have supported the Commission's report. The World Health Organization (WHO) has endorsed the Commission indicators and their surgical lead (Walt Johnson) has brought fresh strategic thinking to the organization, and powerful support to the national planning processes16.Despite the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and a reorientation towards health system strengthening, the surgical community has yet to capitalize on global development assistance for health17. Decision‐makers do not necessarily allocate funds proportional to avertable mortality and morbidity, but demand well defined, effective interventions and credible metrics to measure success18. However, the fact that the surgical community now defines better the burden of surgical disease, and has cost‐effective interventions19 and key performance indicators, bodes well for political priority ascendance. In addition, the call for an independent accountability mechanism to track progress from Holmer and colleagues10 in this supplement is also timely and relevant. Sufficient funding from national health budgets as well as international funders should follow the imperatives that, without urgent and accelerated investment in surgical scale‐up, low‐ and middle‐income countries (LMICs) will continue to have immense losses in economic productivity. In comparison, modest scale‐up of costs (1–8 per cent of total annual health expenditure in LMICs) would be sufficient to see returns. Strong advocacy for global surgery funding is required20, and an appropriately funded WHO should be an important starting point.The global surgery community should continue to engage with both humanitarian aid and the wider development sector to disseminate the final Commission messages: that investing in surgical services in LMICs is affordable, saves lives and promotes economic development; and that surgery is part of the health system solution for many disparate health agendas – from maternal health, to trauma, cancer and neonatal mortality. This upstream activity, as is happening in Ethiopia, Zambia, Tanzania and other countries through national surgical planning, should lead to downstream implementation for real change16. However, we must not be fooled: without funding there will be no meaningful implementation of emerging national plans and no access to safe, affordable surgical and anaesthesia care for five billion people.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Association of IgE-Mediated Allergy With Risk of Complicated Appendicitis in a Pediatric Population
- Author
-
Lars Hagander, Erik Omling, Martin Salö, Pernilla Stenström, and Johanna Gudjonsdottir
- Subjects
Gangrene ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Perforation (oil well) ,Retrospective cohort study ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Lower risk ,Appendicitis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Interquartile range ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Pediatric surgery ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Original Investigation - Abstract
Importance: Childhood appendicitis is commonly complicated by gangrene and perforation, yet the causes of complicated appendicitis and how to avoid it remain unknown. Objective: To investigate whether children with IgE-mediated allergy have a lower risk of complicated appendicitis. Design, Setting, and Participants: This retrospective cohort study included all consecutive patients younger than 15 years (hereinafter referred to as children) who underwent appendectomy for acute appendicitis at a tertiary pediatric surgery center in Sweden between January 1, 2007, through July 31, 2017. Children were stratified between those with and without IgE-mediated allergies. Main Outcome and Measures: Risk of complicated appendicitis with gangrene or perforation, with occurrence of IgE-mediated allergy as an independent variable and adjusted for age, sex, primary health care contacts, seasonal antigenic exposure, allergy medications, appendicolith, and duration of symptoms. Results: Of 605 included children (63.0% boys; median age, 10 years; interquartile range, 7-12 years), 102 (16.9%) had IgE-mediated allergy and 503 (83.1%) had no allergy. Complicated appendicitis occurred in 20 children with IgE-mediated allergy (19.6%) compared with 236 with no allergy (46.9%; adjusted odds ratio, 0.33; 95% CI, 0.18-0.59). No significant allergy effect modification by sex, seasonal antigenic exposure, or allergy medication was found. Children with IgE-mediated allergy had a shorter hospital stay (median, 2 days for both groups; interquartile range, 1-2 days vs 1-5 days; P =.004). Conclusions and Relevance: In this study, children with IgE-mediated allergy had a lower risk of complicated appendicitis. The findings suggest that immunologic disposition modifies the clinical pattern of appendiceal disease. This theory introduces novel opportunities for understanding of the pathogenesis and clinical decision making for one of childhood's most common surgical emergencies. (Less)
- Published
- 2018
50. The need to collect, aggregate, and analyze global anesthesia and surgery data
- Author
-
Sabrina, Juran, Magdalena, Gruendl, Isobel H, Marks, P Niclas, Broer, Jose Miguel, Guzman, Justine, Davies, Mark, Shrime, Walter, Johnson, Hampus, Holmer, Gregory, Peck, Emmanuel, Makasa, Lars, Hagander, Stephanie J, Klug, John G, Meara, Adrian W, Gelb, and David, Ljungman
- Subjects
Anesthesiology ,Data Collection ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,General Surgery ,International Cooperation ,Anesthesia ,Global Health - Abstract
In the Sustainable Development Goals era, there is a new awareness of the need for an integrated approach to healthcare interventions and a strong commitment to Universal Health Coverage. To achieve the goal of strengthening entire health systems, surgery, as a crosscutting treatment modality, is indispensable. For any health system strengthening exercise, baseline data and longitudinal monitoring of progress are necessary. With improved data capabilities, there are unparalleled possibilities to map out and understand systems, integrating data from many sources and sectors. Nevertheless, there is also a need to prioritize among indicators to avoid information overload and data collection fatigue. There is a similar need to define indicators and collection methodology to create standardized and comparable data. Finally, there is a need to establish data pathways to ensure clear responsibilities amongst national and international institutions and integrate surgical metrics into existing mechanisms for sustainable data collection. This is a call to collect, aggregate, and analyze global anesthesia and surgery data, with an account of existing data sources and a proposed way forward.RéSUMé: À l’époque des objectifs du développement durable, on constate une nouvelle sensibilisation au besoin d’une approche intégrée dans les interventions en soins de santé et un fort engagement en faveur d’une couverture médicale universelle. Pour atteindre l’objectif du renforcement de systèmes entiers de santé, la chirurgie en tant que modalité thérapeutique transversale est indispensable. Pour toute activité de renforcement du système de santé, des données de référence et un suivi longitudinal des progrès sont nécessaires. Avec de meilleures données, il existe des possibilités sans équivalent de cartographier et de comprendre les systèmes, en intégrant des données provenant de multiples sources et secteurs. Néanmoins, il est également nécessaire de prioriser les indicateurs pour éviter une surcharge d’informations et une fatigue dans la collecte des données. Il existe un besoin similaire de définition des indicateurs et de la méthodologie de collecte afin de créer des données standardisées et comparables. Enfin, il est nécessaire d’établir des cheminements de données pour garantir des responsabilités claires entre les institutions nationales et internationales et intégrer les paramètres chirurgicaux dans les mécanismes existants pour une collecte durable des données. Ceci est un appel à la collecte, au regroupement et à l’analyse de données globales en anesthésie et en chirurgie avec un compte rendu des sources de données existantes et une proposition d’avancée.
- Published
- 2018
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.