Safety and Sustainability: Optimizing Outcomes and Changing Paradigms in Global Health Endeavors. Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open Malapati, S. H., Ramly, E. P., Riesel, J., Pusic, A. L., Lee, G. K., Magee, W. P., Nthumba, P. M. 2023; 11 (9): e5256

Abstract

The need to address inequities in global surgical care has garnered increased attention since 2015, after the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery underscored the importance of ensuring safe, accessible, affordable, and timely surgical and anesthetic care. The vast unmet global plastic surgery needs make plastic surgery care essential in reducing the global burden of disease. In the past, many nonprofit organizations undertook humanitarian activities within low- and middle-income countries that were primarily service-provision oriented. The Lancet Commission on Global Surgery report prompted a shift in focus from direct patient care models to sustainable global surgical models. The realization that 33% of deaths worldwide were due to unmet surgical needs led to a global shift of strategy toward the development of local systems, surgical capacity, and a focus on patient safety and quality of care within international global surgery partnerships.In this report, the authors explore some of the primary components of sustainable international global surgical partnerships discussed in a recent panel at the American Society of Plastic Surgeons Plastic Surgery The Meeting 2022, titled "Safety and Sustainability Overseas: Optimizing Outcomes and Changing Paradigms in Global Health Endeavors." A literature review elaborating the topics discussed was performed.This report focuses on cultural competence and humility, international collaboration, and the use of technology and innovation, all of which are needed to promote sustainability and patient safety, within global surgery efforts.The adoption of these components into international surgical collaborations will lead to greatly enhancing the development and sustainability of mutually beneficial relationships.

View details for DOI 10.1097/GOX.0000000000005256

View details for PubMedID 37691703

View details for PubMedCentralID PMC10489197