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Postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in Africa: an international risk-adjusted analysis

Background There is an increasing call for a broader approach to women's surgical care in low- and middle-income countries, beyond access to caesarean section. While obstetric outcomes in Africa are well described, outcomes following non-obstetric surgical care for women in Africa are relatively unk...

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Main Author: Paterson, Amy Frances
Other Authors: Maswime, Salome
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of General Surgery 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Paterson, Amy Frances
author2 Maswime, Salome
author_browse Maswime, Salome
Paterson, Amy Frances
author_facet Maswime, Salome
Paterson, Amy Frances
author_sort Paterson, Amy Frances
collection Thesis
description Background There is an increasing call for a broader approach to women's surgical care in low- and middle-income countries, beyond access to caesarean section. While obstetric outcomes in Africa are well described, outcomes following non-obstetric surgical care for women in Africa are relatively unknown. Methods We did a secondary analysis of the African Surgical Outcomes Study (ASOS) focusing on severe postoperative complications (defined as death and severe complications) in females following non-obstetric, non-gynaecological surgical procedures. ASOS was a seven-day, African multi-centre prospective observational cohort study of adult (≥18 years) patients undergoing surgery in 25 African countries. These African outcomes were compared to international outcomes from the International Surgical Outcomes Study (ISOS) in a riskadjusted logistic regression analysis. Findings There were 1498 African participants and 18449 international participants who met the inclusion criteria. The African cohort were younger than the international cohort (47 (17) years versus 57 (17); p= <0·0001) and had a lower preoperative risk profile. Severe complications occurred in 41 (2·8%) of 1471 patients of the African cohort, and 431 (2·3%) of 18449 patients in the ISOS cohort, with in-hospital mortality following severe complications of 20/41 (48·8%) in ASOS and 78/431 (18·1%) in ISOS. The adjusted odds ratio for a woman in Africa developing a severe postoperative complication following elective non-obstetric, non-gynaecological surgery compared to the international incidence was 2·114 (95% CI 1·468 - 3·042, p<0·0001). Interpretation: Women living in Africa have double the odds of severe postoperative complications following elective non-obstetric, non-gynaecological surgery compared to the international incidence.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36519 Postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in Africa: an international risk-adjusted analysis Paterson, Amy Frances Maswime, Salome Biccard, Bruce Medicine Background There is an increasing call for a broader approach to women's surgical care in low- and middle-income countries, beyond access to caesarean section. While obstetric outcomes in Africa are well described, outcomes following non-obstetric surgical care for women in Africa are relatively unknown. Methods We did a secondary analysis of the African Surgical Outcomes Study (ASOS) focusing on severe postoperative complications (defined as death and severe complications) in females following non-obstetric, non-gynaecological surgical procedures. ASOS was a seven-day, African multi-centre prospective observational cohort study of adult (≥18 years) patients undergoing surgery in 25 African countries. These African outcomes were compared to international outcomes from the International Surgical Outcomes Study (ISOS) in a riskadjusted logistic regression analysis. Findings There were 1498 African participants and 18449 international participants who met the inclusion criteria. The African cohort were younger than the international cohort (47 (17) years versus 57 (17); p= <0·0001) and had a lower preoperative risk profile. Severe complications occurred in 41 (2·8%) of 1471 patients of the African cohort, and 431 (2·3%) of 18449 patients in the ISOS cohort, with in-hospital mortality following severe complications of 20/41 (48·8%) in ASOS and 78/431 (18·1%) in ISOS. The adjusted odds ratio for a woman in Africa developing a severe postoperative complication following elective non-obstetric, non-gynaecological surgery compared to the international incidence was 2·114 (95% CI 1·468 - 3·042, p<0·0001). Interpretation: Women living in Africa have double the odds of severe postoperative complications following elective non-obstetric, non-gynaecological surgery compared to the international incidence. 2022-06-23T15:20:39Z 2022-06-23T15:20:39Z 2022 2022-06-23T15:17:04Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36519 eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Medicine
Paterson, Amy Frances
Postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in Africa: an international risk-adjusted analysis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in Africa: an international risk-adjusted analysis
title_full Postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in Africa: an international risk-adjusted analysis
title_fullStr Postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in Africa: an international risk-adjusted analysis
title_full_unstemmed Postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in Africa: an international risk-adjusted analysis
title_short Postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in Africa: an international risk-adjusted analysis
title_sort postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in africa an international risk adjusted analysis
topic Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36519
work_keys_str_mv AT patersonamyfrances postoperativeoutcomesassociatedwithsurgicalcareforwomeninafricaaninternationalriskadjustedanalysis