Author/Authors :
YOUNG, Sven Department of Surgery - Kamuzu Central Hospital, Lilongwe , BANZA, Leonard Department of Surgery - Kamuzu Central Hospital, Lilongwe , MUNTHALI, Boston S Department of Surgery - Kamuzu Central Hospital, Lilongwe , MANDA, Kumbukani G Department of Surgery - Kamuzu Central Hospital, Lilongwe , GALLAHER, Jared Department of Surgery - University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA , CHARLES, Anthony Department of Surgery - University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA
Abstract :
Background and purpose — The burden of road traffi c injuries
globally is rising rapidly, and has a huge effect on health systems
and development in low- and middle-income countries. Malawi is
a small low-income country in southeastern Africa with a popu-
lation of 16.7 million and a gross national income per capita of
only 250 USD. The impact of the rising burden of trauma is very
apparent to healthcare workers on the ground, but there are very
few data showing this development.
Patients and methods — The annual number of femoral frac-
ture patients admitted to Kamuzu Central Hospital (KCH) in the
Capital of Malawi, Lilongwe, from 2009 to 2014 was retrieved
from the KCH trauma database. Linear regression curve esti-
mation was used to project the growth in the burden of femoral
fractures and the number of operations performed for femoral
fractures over the same time period.
Results — 992 patients with femoral fractures (26% of all
admissions for fractures) presented at KCH from 2009 through
2014. In this period, there was a 132% increase in the annual
number of femoral fractures admitted to KCH. In the same time
period, the total number of operations more than doubled, but
there was no increase in the number of operations performed
for femoral fractures. Overall, there was a 7% mortality rate for
patients with femoral fractures.
Interpretation — The burden of femoral fractures in Malawi
is rising rapidly, and the surgical resources available cannot keep
up with this development. Limited funds for orthopedic trauma
care in Malawi should be invested in central training hospitals,
to develop a sustainable number of orthopedic surgeons and
improve current infrastructure and equipment. The centraliza-
tion of orthopedic surgical care delivery at the central training
hospitals will lead to better access to surgical care and early
return of patients to local district hospitals for rehabilitation, thus increasing surgical throughput and effi ciency in a more cost-
effective manner, with the goal of expanding the future orthopedic
surgical workforce to meet the national need.
Keywords :
impact of the increasing burden of trauma , Malawi , increasing burden of trauma , orthopedic trauma service priorities