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Published in: Child's Nervous System 10/2018

01-10-2018 | A.J. Raimondi ISPN Award

Pediatric neurosurgical bellwether procedures for infrastructure capacity building in hospitals and healthcare systems worldwide

Authors: Michael C. Dewan, Ronnie E. Baticulon, Krishnan Ravindran, Christopher M. Bonfield, Dan Poenaru, William Harkness

Published in: Child's Nervous System | Issue 10/2018

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Abstract

Purpose

Quantifying the global burden of pediatric neurosurgical disease—and current efforts addressing it—is challenging, particularly in the absence of uniform terminology. We sought to establish bellwether procedures for pediatric neurosurgery, in order to standardize terminology, establish priorities, and facilitate goal-oriented capacity building.

Methods

Members of international pediatric neurosurgical and pediatric surgical societies were surveyed via the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) platform. Among 15 proposed neurosurgical procedures, respondents assigned numerical grades of surgical necessity and selected hospital-level designation within a three-tiered system. A procedure was considered a bellwether if (a) the majority of respondents deemed it necessary for either a primary- or secondary-level hospital and (b) the procedure was graded at or above the 90th percentile on a continuous scale of essentiality. Data were compiled and analyzed using Stata software.

Results

Complete responses were obtained from 459 surgeons from 76 countries, the majority of whom practiced in a tertiary referral hospital (88%), with a primarily public patient population (64%). Six bellwether procedures were identified for pediatric neurosurgery: shunt for hydrocephalus, myelomeningocele closure, burr holes, trauma craniotomy, external ventricular drain (EVD) insertion, and cerebral abscess evacuation. Few differences in bellwether criteria designations were observed among respondents from different World Health Organization regions and World Bank income groups.

Conclusions

The six bellwether procedures identified can be used as markers of infrastructure capacity at various hospital levels, hence allowing targeted neurosurgical capacity-building in low-resource settings in order to avert disability and death from childhood neurosurgical disease.
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Metadata
Title
Pediatric neurosurgical bellwether procedures for infrastructure capacity building in hospitals and healthcare systems worldwide
Authors
Michael C. Dewan
Ronnie E. Baticulon
Krishnan Ravindran
Christopher M. Bonfield
Dan Poenaru
William Harkness
Publication date
01-10-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Child's Nervous System / Issue 10/2018
Print ISSN: 0256-7040
Electronic ISSN: 1433-0350
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-018-3902-y

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