Providing more than health care: the dynamics of humanitarian surgery efforts on the local microeconomy.

Autor: Nagengast ES; From the *Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, and †Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; ‡University of Nebraska College of Medicine, Omaha, Nebraska; §Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; ∥Operation Smile, Virginia Beach, Virginia; ¶Center for Surgery and Public Health, and #Department of Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts., Caterson EJ, Magee WP Jr, Hatcher K, Ramos MS, Campbell A
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: The Journal of craniofacial surgery [J Craniofac Surg] 2014 Sep; Vol. 25 (5), pp. 1622-5.
DOI: 10.1097/SCS.0000000000001133
Abstrakt: Humanitarian cleft surgery has long been provided by teams from resource-rich countries traveling for short-term missions to resource-poor countries. After identifying an area of durable unmet need through surgical missions, Operation Smile constructed a permanent center for cleft care in Northeast India. The Operation Smile Guwahati Comprehensive Cleft Care Center (GCCCC) uses a high-volume subspecialized institution to provide safe, quality, comprehensive, and cost-effective cleft care to a highly vulnerable patient population in Assam, India. The purpose of this study was to profile the expenses of several cleft missions carried out in Assam and to compare these to the expenditures of the permanent comprehensive cleft care center. We reviewed financial data from 4 Operation Smile missions in Assam between December 2009 and February 2011 and from the GCCCC for the 2012-2013 fiscal year. Expenses from the 2 models were categorized and compared. In the studied period, 33% of the mission expenses were spent locally compared to 94% of those of the center. The largest expenses in the mission model were air travel (48.8%) and hotel expenses (21.6%) for the team, whereas salaries (46.3%) and infrastructure costs (19.8%) made up the largest fractions of expenses in the center model. The evolution from mission-based care to a specialty hospital model in Guwahati incorporated a transition from vertical inputs to investments in infrastructure and human capital to create a sustainable local care delivery system.
Databáze: MEDLINE