Global access to surgical care: a modelling study
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary · Harvard University · +15 more institutions
Abstract
More than 2 billion people are unable to receive surgical care based on operating theatre density alone. The vision of the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery is universal access to safe, affordable surgical and anaesthesia care when needed. We aimed to estimate the number of individuals worldwide without access to surgical services as defined by the Commission's vision.
We modelled access to surgical services in 196 countries with respect to four dimensions: timeliness, surgical capacity, safety, and affordability. We built a chance tree for each country to model the probability of surgical access with respect to each dimension, and from this we constructed a statistical model to estimate the proportion of the population in each country that does not have access to surgical services. We accounted for uncertainty with one-way sensitivity analyses, multiple imputation for missing data, and probabilistic sensitivity analysis.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 52.42
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
16- BCBlake C. AlkireCorresponding
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Harvard University
- NRNakul Raykar
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard University
- MGMark G. Shrime
Boston University, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Harvard University
- TGThomas G. Weiser
Stanford University
- SWStephen W. Bickler
University of California San Diego, Rady Children's Hospital-San Diego
Topics & keywords
- Population
- Commission
- Medicine
- Universal design
- Business
- Environmental health
- Computer science
- Finance
- No poverty