TY - JOUR AU - Jenkin, Daniel AU - Lett, Ronald AU - Getahun, Gashaw AU - Ali, Mohammed PY - 2022/09/30 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Surgical Skill, Providers and Infrastructure Needs Assessment in North Gondar, Ethiopia: A Mixed Method Study JF - Ethiopian Journal of Health and Biomedical Sciences JA - Ethiop J Health Biomed Sci VL - 12 IS - 2 SE - Orginal Articles DO - 10.20372/ejhbs.v12i2.374 UR - https://journal.uog.edu.et/index.php/EJHBS/article/view/374 SP - AB - <p><strong><em>Background: </em></strong><em>The shortage of skilled surgical providers in Sub-Saharan Africa is reaching a crisis level.The Canadian Network for International Surgery has been delivering structured surgical skills courses in Ethiopia for 15 years. However, an assessment of met needs, and ongoing barriers to surgical care has never been done. Ethiopia has set out plans to expand surgical capacity at the district hospital levels through upgrading and building hospitals, and task shifting through a surgical health officer program. This study aimed to assess the met need for surgical infrastructure, providers, and educationin in North Gondar Zone, Ethiopia. Sub-objectives are to assess the perceived values of a structured surgical training courses, and to identify ongoing barriers to emergency surgery. </em></p><p><strong><em>Method: </em></strong><em>This mixed-method of study employed: </em><em>semi-structured interviews to surgical providers, a review of operative records, an infrastructure needs assessment. The research also used questionnaires which was distributed to medical trainees to assess the met needs, and to identify barriers to care.A total of190 trainees participated in the survey. In addition, 12 participants were involved in the interview from 4 hospitals. I n addition,  descriptive statistics were used to describe the study subjects and the surgical skill needs using tables and graphs.</em></p><p><strong><em>Result: </em></strong><em>Emergency surgery was only performed in Gondar University Hospital with a met need for a cesarean section of only 15%. There was a severe shortage of both hospitals, and care providers in the zone. Lack of consumable emergency equipment was cited as the greatest barrier to delivering emergency care at the district level.</em></p><p><strong><em>Conclusion: </em></strong><em>Shortage of providers, inadequate surgical infrastructure, and a severe lack of continuing skill improvement needs were observed.</em></p><p> </p> ER -