Global surgery
Context:
- According to recent reports, there is neglect of global surgey across the South Asia which has the largest population .
What is meant by global surgery?
- Global surgery refers to the study and practice of improving access to timely, quality, and affordable surgical care.
- It focuses on the horizontal health systems strengthening through addressing a range of health challenges in surgical care that improve health outcomes, particularly in vulnerable populations.
- Global surgery mostly contributes to achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals 2030 (SDGs) by addressing the elimination of poverty (SDG 1), ensuring good health and well-being (SDG 3), promoting decent work and economic growth (SDG 8), and reducing inequalities (SDGs 5 and 10).
- Global surgery issues are present across the national boundaries and intersect with other global health issues such as migration and the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Global surgery emphasizes on equitable access to emergency and essential surgery.
- Even though it predominantly focuses on low and middleincome countries (LMICs), it also emphasizes on access disparities and underserved populations in highincome countries (HICs).
- These essential surgeries include essential and emergency surgeries such as surgery, obstetrics, trauma, and anaesthesia (SOTA).
- Even after the presence of small differences, there is largely a consensus across multiple international groups on about thirty procedures that fall under the umbrella of emergency and essential surgery.
Why it’s a big problem?
- The veracity of problems of global surgery is substantial, encompassing a range of challenges including inaccessibility, disease burden, and economic burden.
- It is noted that five billion people or over 70% of the global population lack timely access to safe and affordable surgical care when needed.
- It is important to note that nearly 99% and 96% of the people in low and lowermiddleincome countries (LLMICs) respectively are facing access gaps compared to 24% in highincome countries (HICs).
- Of the five billion people about 1.6 billion people lacking access live in South Asia.
- This translates to over 98% of the South Asian population who are lacking access to safe and affordable SOTA care.