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Surgical capacity, productivity and efficiency at the district level in Sub-Saharan Africa: A three-country study

Abstract:

Introduction: Efficient utilisation of surgical resources is essential when providing surgical care in low-resources settings. Countries are developing plans to scale up surgery, though insufficiently based on empirical evidence. This paper investigates the determinants of hospital efficiency in district hospitals in three African countries.

Methods: Three-month data, comprising surgical capacity indicators and volumes of major surgical procedures collected from 61 district-level hospitals in Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia, were analysed. Data envelopment analysis was used to calculate average hospital efficiency scores (max. = 1) for each country. Quantile regression analysis was selected to estimate the relationship between surgical volume and production factors. Two-stage bootstrap regression analysis was used to estimate the determinants of hospital efficiency.

Results: Average hospital efficiency scores were 0.77 in Tanzania, 0.70 in Malawi and 0.41 in Zambia. Hospitals with high efficiency scores had significantly more surgical staff compared with low efficiency hospitals (DEA score<1). Hospitals that scored high on the most commonly utilised surgical capacity index were not the ones with high surgical volumes or high efficiency. The number of surgical team members, which was lowest in Zambia, was strongly, positively correlated with surgical productivity and efficiency.

Conclusion: Hospital efficiency, combining capacity measures and surgical outputs, is a better indicator of surgical performance than capacity measures, which could be misleading if used alone for surgical planning. Investment in the surgical workforce, in particular, is critical to improving district hospital surgical productivity and efficiency.

Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1371/journal.pone.0278212

Authors


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Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0001-9865-8094


Publisher:
Public Library of Science
Journal:
PLoS ONE More from this journal
Volume:
17
Issue:
11
Article number:
e0278212
Publication date:
2022-11-30
Acceptance date:
2022-11-12
DOI:
EISSN:
1932-6203
ISSN:
1932-6203
Pmid:
36449505


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1311456
Local pid:
pubs:1311456
Deposit date:
2023-02-22

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