Abstract
Impressive progress has been made in global surgery in the past 10 years, and now serious and evidence-based national strategies are being developed for scaling-up surgical services in sub-Saharan Africa. Key to achieving this goal requires developing a realistic country-based estimate of burden of surgical disease, developing an accurate estimate of existing need, developing methods, rigorously planning and implementing the plan, and scaling-up essential surgical services at the national level.
Highlights
Impressive progress has been made in global surgery in the past 10 years, and serious and evidence-based national strategies are being developed for scaling-up surgical services in sub-Saharan Africa
The Editorial Opinion by Gajewski et al1 illustrates how much progress has been made in global surgery in recent years
What we need is realistic estimates contextualized to each individual country so that more focused and highly relevant plans can be made for the implementation of essential surgical services
Summary
Impressive progress has been made in global surgery in the past 10 years, and serious and evidence-based national strategies are being developed for scaling-up surgical services in sub-Saharan Africa. Key to achieving this goal requires developing a realistic country-based estimate of burden of surgical disease, developing an accurate estimate of existing need, developing methods, rigorously planning and implementing the plan, and scaling-up essential surgical services at the national level.
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