The international surgical journal with global reach

This is the Scientific Surgery Archive, which contains all randomized clinical trials in surgery that have been identified by searching the top 50 English language medical journal issues since January 1998. Compiled by Jonothan J. Earnshaw, former Editor-in-Chief, BJS

Frequency of surgery and hospital admissions for communicable diseases in a high‐ and middle‐income setting. BJS 2015; 102: 1142-1149.

Published: 8th June 2015

Authors: A. Jarnheimer, G. Kantor, S. Bickler, P. Farmer, L. Hagander

Background

In high‐income countries, non‐communicable diseases drive the demand for surgical healthcare. Middle‐income countries face a double disease burden, of both communicable and non‐communicable disease. The aim of this study was to describe the role of surgery for the in‐hospital care of infectious conditions in the high‐income country Sweden and the middle‐income country South Africa.

Method

A retrospective cohort study was performed of 1·4 million infectious disease admissions. The study populations were the entire population of Sweden, and a cohort of 3·5 million South Africans with private healthcare insurance, during a 7‐year interval. The outcome measures were frequency of surgical procedures across a spectrum of diseases, and sex and age during the medical care event.

Results

Some 8·1 per cent of Swedish and 15·7 per cent of South African hospital admissions were because of infectious disease. The proportion of infectious disease admissions that were associated with surgery was constant over time: 8·0 (95 per cent c.i. 7·9 to 8·1) per cent in Sweden and 21·1 (21·0 to 21·2) per cent in South Africa. The frequency of surgery was 2·6 (2·6 to 2·7) times greater in South Africa, and 2·2 (2·2 to 2·3) times higher after standardization for age, sex and disease category.

Conclusion

The study suggests that surgical care is required to manage patients with communicable diseases, even in high‐income settings with efficient prevention and functional primary care. These results further stress the importance of scaling up functional surgical health systems in low‐ and middle‐income countries, where the disease burden is distinguished by infectious disease.

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