Abstract

IntroductionDespite being one of the main vacation destinations in the world, health care in the Caribbean faces many difficulties. The challenges involved in these islands’ medical care range from low-resource institutions to lack of specialized care. In the field of thoracic and cardiac surgery, many limitations exist, and these include the lack of access to cardiac surgery for many small islands and little governmental funding for minimally invasive approaches in thoracic surgery.MethodsLiterature review was done using PubMed/MEDLINE and Google Scholar databases to identify articles describing the characteristics of thoracic and cardiac surgery departments on Caribbean islands. Articles on the history, current states of practice, and advances in cardiothoracic surgery in the Caribbean were reviewed.ResultsRegardless of the middle to high-income profile of the Caribbean, there are significant differences in the speed of technological growth in cardiothoracic surgery from island to island, as well as disparities between the quality of care and resources. Many islands struggle to advance the field of cardiothoracic surgery both through lack of local cardiac surgery centers and limited financial funding for minimally invasive thoracic surgery.ConclusionsCardiac and thoracic surgery in the Caribbean depend not only on the support from local government policies and proper distribution of healthcare budgets, but efforts by the surgeons themselves to change and improve institutional cultures. Although resource availability still remains a challenge, the Caribbean remains an important region that deserves special attention with regard to the unmet needs for long-term sustainability of chest surgery.

Highlights

  • Despite being one of the main vacation destinations in the world, health care in the Caribbean faces many difficulties

  • In the field of thoracic and cardiac surgery, many limitations exist, and these include the lack of access to cardiac surgery for many small islands, little governmental funding, and limited health budgets for minimally invasive approaches in thoracic surgery[1]

  • Despite the general “high-income” region profile of Caribbean islands, many difficulties surface with regard to both access to and quality of specialized care, regarding cardiac

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Summary

Introduction

Despite being one of the main vacation destinations in the world, health care in the Caribbean faces many difficulties. In the field of thoracic and cardiac surgery, many limitations exist, and these include the lack of access to cardiac surgery for many small islands and little governmental funding for minimally invasive approaches in thoracic surgery. In the field of thoracic and cardiac surgery, many limitations exist, and these include the lack of access to cardiac surgery for many small islands, little governmental funding, and limited health budgets for minimally invasive approaches in thoracic surgery[1]. The Caribbean is a region consisting of 44 million inhabitants Most of these islands are middle to high-income primarily, with a very small percentage of them being low-income islands. Despite the general “high-income” region profile of Caribbean islands, many difficulties surface with regard to both access to and quality of specialized care, regarding cardiac

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