Operative Epidemiology of the First Five Years in a New African Neurosurgery Training Center: The Experience in Rural Kenya at Tenwek Hospital 2016 to 2021
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Background: One strategy to increase the availability of neurosurgical services in underserved regions within Sub-Saharan African countries is to create new residency training programs outside of cosmopolitan cities where programs may already exist. In 2016 Tenwek Hospital in rural western Kenya began offering full-time neurosurgical services and in 2020 inaugurated a residency training program. This review highlights the operative epidemiology of the first 5 years of the hospital's neurosurgical department.
Methods: A retrospective review of all cases performed by a neurosurgeon at Tenwek Hospital between September 2016 and February 2022 was performed. Patient demographics, surgical indications, length of stay, and in-hospital mortality rates were collected.
Results: A total of 1756 cases were retrievable. Of these, 1006 (57.3%) were male and mean age was 30 years (range 1 day to 97 years). Mean length of stay was 11 ± 2 days and in-hospital mortality rate was 4.4% (77 patients). The most common pathologies in children comprised hydrocephalus and spina bifida (42.5% and 21.1%, respectively); in adults, cranial trauma (28.2%), oncology (25.2%), and degenerative spine (18.5%) were most common. Trauma was the leading cause of death.
Conclusions: The neurosurgical caseload of a rural hospital in an underserved area can provide not only an adequate neurosurgical volume, but a robust and varied exposure that is necessary for training safe and competent surgeons who are willing to remain in their countries of origin.
Addressing the state of surgical care In Kenya: challenges, opportunities, and future directions.
Kuol P, Wambu P, Mwangi R, Matui B, Kiprop A, Sokoto K Ann Med Surg (Lond). 2024; 86(12):6913-6915.
PMID: 39649911 PMC: 11623851. DOI: 10.1097/MS9.0000000000002667.