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BMJ Publishing Group, BMJ Open, 10(12), p. e062616, 2022

DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062616

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Improving quality of surgical and anaesthesia care in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review of hospital-based quality improvement interventions

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

ObjectivesTo systematically review existing literature on hospital-based quality improvement studies in sub-Saharan Africa that aim to improve surgical and anaesthesia care, capturing clinical, process and implementation outcomes in order to evaluate the impact of the intervention and implementation learning.DesignWe conducted a systematic literature review and narrative synthesis.SettingLiterature on hospital-based quality improvement studies in sub-Saharan Africa reviewed until 31 December 2021.ParticipantsMEDLINE, EMBASE, Global Health, CINAHL, Web of Science databases and grey literature were searched.InterventionWe extracted data on intervention characteristics and how the intervention was delivered and evaluated.Primary and secondary outcome measuresImportantly, we assessed whether clinical, process and implementation outcomes were collected and separately categorised the outcomes under the Institute of Medicine quality domains. Risk of bias was not assessed.ResultsOf 1573 articles identified, 49 were included from 17/48 sub-Saharan African countries, 16 of which were low-income or lower middle-income countries. Almost two-thirds of the studies took place in East Africa (31/49, 63.2%). The most common intervention focus was reduction of surgical site infection (12/49, 24.5%) and use of a surgical safety checklist (14/49, 28.6%). Use of implementation and quality improvement science methods were rare. Over half the studies measured clinical outcomes (29/49, 59.2%), with the most commonly reported ones being perioperative mortality (13/29, 44.8%) and surgical site infection rate (14/29, 48.3%). Process and implementation outcomes were reported in over two thirds of the studies (34/49, 69.4% and 35, 71.4%, respectively). The most studied quality domain was safety (44/49, 89.8%), with efficiency (4/49, 8.2%) and equitability (2/49, 4.1%) the least studied domains.ConclusionsThere are few hospital-based studies that focus on improving the quality of surgical and anaesthesia care in sub-Saharan Africa. Use of implementation and quality improvement methodologies remain low, and some quality domains are neglected.PROSPERO registration numberCRD42019125570