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The impact of subspecialty services on health care delivery - a community health centre based study


S Cox
F Mpofu
A Berg
H Rode

Abstract

Objectives. The objective was to evaluate the role of a paediatric surgical consultant at a primary health care facility.

Design. Descriptive and prospective.

Setting. In the process of planning and implementation of the 2010 health plan of the Provincial Government of the Western Cape, a shift occurred in  the delivery of health care to children from a provincially based hospital  system to a municipally based primary health care system. To contribute  towards enabling this process, the Department of Paediatric Surgery at Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital established a paediatric surgical day clinic at a local community health centre during 2001.

Subjects. Information was obtained from patient data sheets containing  details of consultations at the sub-specialist surgical clinic at Michael  Mapongwana Community Health Centre.

Results. Over a 58-month period 1 171 children were seen, of whom 655 were male and 427 female. Their ages ranged from 0 to 19 years, the  largest group being under 1 year. Eighty per cent of patients were  accompanied by their mothers. The correct diagnosis was established by the nurse practitioners in 71%. General paediatric surgical conditions predominated, followed by medical, dermatological, orthopaedic, trauma, otolaryngo- pharyngology, infectious diseases, ophthalmology, urology, neurosurgery, malignancy and maxillofacial  conditions. The details are set out in the report. In total 597 patients were referred directly to an  appropriate care facility and 574 patients could be managed entirely at the clinic level

Condusions.This study demonstrated the significant public health problem of paediatric surgical disease. It  emphasised the preventative and cost-effective role of a surgical clinic at primary health care level. The clinic allowed for timely surgical intervention in 65% of surgical cases, thereby decreasing inappropriate tertiary referrals. We believe that bringing specialists into the community can only strengthen the 2010 health care plan.


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eISSN: 2078-5135
print ISSN: 0256-9574