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The implementation and impact of a pilot hydrocele surgery camp for LF-endemic communities in Ethiopia

BACKGROUND: Ethiopia aims to eliminate lymphatic filariasis by 2020, through a dual approach of mass drug administration to interrupt transmission and morbidity control which includes making hydrocele surgery available in all endemic areas. Locating patients requiring surgery, providing high quality...

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Autores principales: Beyene, Andualem Deneke, Kebede, Fikreab, Mammo, Belete Mengistu, Negash, Biruck Kebede, Mihret, Addisalem, Abetew, Solomon, Oucha, Asfaw Kejella, Alene, Shigute, Backers, Sharone, Mante, Sunny, Sifri, Zeina, Brady, Molly, McPherson, Scott
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8568282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34695118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009403
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author Beyene, Andualem Deneke
Kebede, Fikreab
Mammo, Belete Mengistu
Negash, Biruck Kebede
Mihret, Addisalem
Abetew, Solomon
Oucha, Asfaw Kejella
Alene, Shigute
Backers, Sharone
Mante, Sunny
Sifri, Zeina
Brady, Molly
McPherson, Scott
author_facet Beyene, Andualem Deneke
Kebede, Fikreab
Mammo, Belete Mengistu
Negash, Biruck Kebede
Mihret, Addisalem
Abetew, Solomon
Oucha, Asfaw Kejella
Alene, Shigute
Backers, Sharone
Mante, Sunny
Sifri, Zeina
Brady, Molly
McPherson, Scott
author_sort Beyene, Andualem Deneke
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Ethiopia aims to eliminate lymphatic filariasis by 2020, through a dual approach of mass drug administration to interrupt transmission and morbidity control which includes making hydrocele surgery available in all endemic areas. Locating patients requiring surgery, providing high quality surgeries, and following up patients are all formidable challenges for many resource-challenged or difficult-to-reach communities. To date, hydrocele surgery in Ethiopia has only occurred when a patient has the knowledge, time and resources to travel to regional hospitals. Ethiopia tested the novel approach of using a surgical camp, defined as mobilizing, transporting, providing surgery at a static site, and following up of a large cohort of hydrocele patients within a hospital’s catchment area, to address delays in seeking and receiving care. METHODOLOGY AND RESULTS: Health extension workers mobilized 252 patients with scrotal swelling from a list of 385 suspected hydrocele cases from seven endemic districts in the region of Beneshangul-Gumuz. Clinical health workers and surgeons confirmed 119 as eligible for surgery. Of 70 additional patients who self-referred, 56 were eligible for surgery. Over a two-week period at a regional hospital, 175 hydrocele excision surgeries were conducted. After discharge three days after surgery, trained clinical health workers followed up with the patients on Day 5, Day 8, Day 14 and 1st-month benchmarks with a randomized follow-up of a selection of patients conducted at 9–12 months. There were no post-operative complications upon discharge at Day 3 and 22, while minor complications occurred (12.6%) between Day 3 and one month. The 9–12 month follow-up found patients self-reported an improvement in quality of life, health and economic status. CONCLUSION: A hydrocele surgery camp was effective at providing a large number of quality surgeries in a short time. Using peripheral health workers to mobilize and follow up patients helped address delays in seeking and receiving quality care. Mainstreaming patient mobilization and follow-up into a community health system could be effective in other countries. The camp’s results also influenced two regions in Ethiopia to change their policies in order to offer free hydrocele surgery (including patient transport, consultation, surgery, diagnostic tests and necessary medications).
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spelling pubmed-85682822021-11-05 The implementation and impact of a pilot hydrocele surgery camp for LF-endemic communities in Ethiopia Beyene, Andualem Deneke Kebede, Fikreab Mammo, Belete Mengistu Negash, Biruck Kebede Mihret, Addisalem Abetew, Solomon Oucha, Asfaw Kejella Alene, Shigute Backers, Sharone Mante, Sunny Sifri, Zeina Brady, Molly McPherson, Scott PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Ethiopia aims to eliminate lymphatic filariasis by 2020, through a dual approach of mass drug administration to interrupt transmission and morbidity control which includes making hydrocele surgery available in all endemic areas. Locating patients requiring surgery, providing high quality surgeries, and following up patients are all formidable challenges for many resource-challenged or difficult-to-reach communities. To date, hydrocele surgery in Ethiopia has only occurred when a patient has the knowledge, time and resources to travel to regional hospitals. Ethiopia tested the novel approach of using a surgical camp, defined as mobilizing, transporting, providing surgery at a static site, and following up of a large cohort of hydrocele patients within a hospital’s catchment area, to address delays in seeking and receiving care. METHODOLOGY AND RESULTS: Health extension workers mobilized 252 patients with scrotal swelling from a list of 385 suspected hydrocele cases from seven endemic districts in the region of Beneshangul-Gumuz. Clinical health workers and surgeons confirmed 119 as eligible for surgery. Of 70 additional patients who self-referred, 56 were eligible for surgery. Over a two-week period at a regional hospital, 175 hydrocele excision surgeries were conducted. After discharge three days after surgery, trained clinical health workers followed up with the patients on Day 5, Day 8, Day 14 and 1st-month benchmarks with a randomized follow-up of a selection of patients conducted at 9–12 months. There were no post-operative complications upon discharge at Day 3 and 22, while minor complications occurred (12.6%) between Day 3 and one month. The 9–12 month follow-up found patients self-reported an improvement in quality of life, health and economic status. CONCLUSION: A hydrocele surgery camp was effective at providing a large number of quality surgeries in a short time. Using peripheral health workers to mobilize and follow up patients helped address delays in seeking and receiving quality care. Mainstreaming patient mobilization and follow-up into a community health system could be effective in other countries. The camp’s results also influenced two regions in Ethiopia to change their policies in order to offer free hydrocele surgery (including patient transport, consultation, surgery, diagnostic tests and necessary medications). Public Library of Science 2021-10-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8568282/ /pubmed/34695118 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009403 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Beyene, Andualem Deneke
Kebede, Fikreab
Mammo, Belete Mengistu
Negash, Biruck Kebede
Mihret, Addisalem
Abetew, Solomon
Oucha, Asfaw Kejella
Alene, Shigute
Backers, Sharone
Mante, Sunny
Sifri, Zeina
Brady, Molly
McPherson, Scott
The implementation and impact of a pilot hydrocele surgery camp for LF-endemic communities in Ethiopia
title The implementation and impact of a pilot hydrocele surgery camp for LF-endemic communities in Ethiopia
title_full The implementation and impact of a pilot hydrocele surgery camp for LF-endemic communities in Ethiopia
title_fullStr The implementation and impact of a pilot hydrocele surgery camp for LF-endemic communities in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed The implementation and impact of a pilot hydrocele surgery camp for LF-endemic communities in Ethiopia
title_short The implementation and impact of a pilot hydrocele surgery camp for LF-endemic communities in Ethiopia
title_sort implementation and impact of a pilot hydrocele surgery camp for lf-endemic communities in ethiopia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8568282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34695118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009403
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