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This article helps to outline the scope of emergency paediatric operations in Tanzania by quantifying the nature of cases seen over a 12 month period in a teaching hospital. Data collected at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre (KCMC) showed that operative paediatric surgical emergencies represented 4% of all paediatric admissions. Of emergency procedures, 47 (43%) were for congenital abnormalities, 32 (29%) for infections, 19 (17%) for trauma and 12 (11%) for other reasons. Emergency operative mortality was 34%. The challenges to meet patient needs in the African setting include: a scarcity of surgeons with training in paediatric surgery, the variety of conditions which all surgeons must manage, a lack of equipment (e.g., neonatal ventilators) and educational resources. Potential avenues for overcoming these challenges are discussed, including the promotion of paediatric surgery as a profession, by the expansion of existing facilities, promoting African associations of paediatric surgery and highlighting the need for resources and continued education and training. We argue that surgical training in developing countries should include the skills needed to treat those paediatric conditions most likely to require urgent surgical intervention.

Original publication

DOI

10.1007/s00383-007-2072-x

Type

Journal article

Journal

Pediatr Surg Int

Publication Date

02/2008

Volume

24

Pages

219 - 222

Keywords

Child, Emergencies, Humans, Pediatrics, Surgery Department, Hospital, Tanzania