Developing Sustainable Orthopaedic Care in Northern Tanzania: An International Collaboration.
Publication/Presentation Date
10-1-2018
Abstract
There is a devastating lack of access to surgical care, including orthopaedic surgery, in low- and middle-income countries. Similar to other low- and middle-income countries, Tanzania has a severe shortage of trained orthopaedic surgeons. The surgeons available are inundated with acute trauma care and musculoskeletal infections; elective procedures are infrequently performed and the burden of neglected care continues to rise annually. Over the past several years, our interdisciplinary team of both American and Tanzanian members has worked to understand the current local cultural and economic barriers to increasing surgical capacity, ensuring surgical safety, delivering affordable care, providing adequate patient follow-up, and improving surgical education. We propose a new paradigm for the delivery of musculoskeletal care and creation of sustained surgical capacity in this setting by building an Orthopaedic Center of Excellence in Moshi, Tanzania, augmented by international partner institutions year-round. This initiative is a public-private partnership led by the University of Pennsylvania in conjunction with Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center. A growing number of contributors, including the Tanzanian Health Ministry, several universities, and industry partners, including general electric (GE) Health Care Africa, are currently helping to advance this concept into reality. Through our model, we aim to increase surgical capacity and quality, as well as enhance local surgical education, with the ultimate objective of training the next generation of African surgeons in the latest surgical techniques and equipment.
Volume
32 Suppl 7
First Page
25
Last Page
25
ISSN
1531-2291
Published In/Presented At
Sheth, N. P., Hardaker, W. M., Zakielarz, K. S., Rudolph, M., Massawe, H., Levin, L. S., & Premkumar, A. (2018). Developing Sustainable Orthopaedic Care in Northern Tanzania: An International Collaboration. Journal of orthopaedic trauma, 32 Suppl 7, S25–S28. https://doi.org/10.1097/BOT.0000000000001296
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
30247396
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article