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Developing Metrics to Define Progress in Children's Surgery

Overview
Journal World J Surg
Publisher Wiley
Specialty General Surgery
Date 2018 Dec 1
PMID 30498890
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

There is a need for relevant, valid, and practical metrics to better quantify both need and progress in global pediatric surgery and for monitoring systems performance. There are several existing surgical metrics in use, including disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), surgical backlog, effective coverage, cost-effectiveness, and the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery indicators. Most of these have, however, not been yet applied to children's surgery, leaving therefore significant data gaps in the burden of disease, infrastructure, human resources, and quality of care assessments in the specialty. This chapter reviews existing global surgical metrics, identifies settings where these have been already applied to children's surgery, and highlights opportunities for further inquiry in filling the knowledge gaps. Directing focused, intentional knowledge translation efforts in the identified areas of deficiency will foster the maturation of global pediatric surgery into a solid academic discipline able to contribute directly to the cause of improving the lives of children around the world.

Citing Articles

Breaking Specialty Silos: Improving Global Child Health Through Essential Surgical Care.

Wasserman I, Peters A, Roa L, Amanullah F, Samad L Glob Health Sci Pract. 2020; 8(2):183-189.

PMID: 32606090 PMC: 7326524. DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-20-00009.


Investing in all of Our Children: Global Pediatric Surgery for the Twenty-First Century.

Fitzgerald T, Rice H World J Surg. 2019; 43(6):1401-1403.

PMID: 30830242 DOI: 10.1007/s00268-019-04973-5.

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