Abstract

BackgroundClinical officers perform much of major emergency surgery in Malawi, in the absence of medical officers. The aim of this study was to validate the advantages and disadvantages of delegation of major obstetric surgery to non-doctors.MethodsDuring a three month period, data from 2131 consecutive obstetric surgeries in 38 district hospitals in Malawi were collected prospectively. The interventions included caesarean sections alone and those that were combined with other interventions such as subtotal and total hysterectomy repair of uterine rupture and tubal ligation. All these surgeries were conducted either by clinical officers or by medical officers.ResultsDuring the study period, clinical officers performed 90% of all straight caesarean sections, 70% of those combined with subtotal hysterectomy, 60% of those combined with total hysterectomy and 89% of those combined with repair of uterine rupture. A comparable profile of patients was operated on by clinical officers and medical officers, respectively. Postoperative outcomes were almost identical in the two groups in terms of maternal general condition – both immediately and 24 hours postoperatively – and regarding occurrence of pyrexia, wound infection, wound dehiscence, need for re-operation, neonatal outcome or maternal death.ConclusionClinical officers perform the bulk of emergency obstetric operations at district hospitals in Malawi. The postoperative outcomes of their procedures are comparable to those of medical officers. Clinical officers constitute a crucial component of the health care team in Malawi for saving maternal and neonatal lives given the scarcity of physicians.

Highlights

  • Clinical officers perform much of major emergency surgery in Malawi, in the absence of medical officers

  • A total of 2131 emergency obstetric operations were performed in the 38 centres during the study period

  • clinical officers (COs) performed as many as 93% of these surgical operations in government district hospitals and 78% in CHAM hospitals

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Clinical officers perform much of major emergency surgery in Malawi, in the absence of medical officers. An initial Human Resources Development Plan 1999 to 2004 assumed an annual HIV/AIDS-related attrition of 2.8% [4]. The migration of health professionals, notably doctors and nurses, to high income countries has had a large contribution to the worsening human resource situation in countries that can least afford the depletion of human resources for health, including Malawi [5]. This raises a conflict between the individual's right to travel and the country's need for an adequate health workforce [6]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call