Thousands in India die at home from abdominal conditions

Reuters Health Information: Thousands in India die at home from abdominal conditions

Thousands in India die at home from abdominal conditions

Last Updated: 2015-09-11

By Lisa Rapaport

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Tens of thousands of people in India die at home each year of conditions such as peptic ulcer disease, appendicitis, and hernias - conditions they might have survived with timely surgery, a study suggests.

Based on a survey of 1.1 million households in India, researchers estimated that 72,000 people died from acute abdominal conditions in 2010. Most of them died at home (71%) and in rural areas (87%), researchers found.

Because these conditions must be treated quickly, access to round-the-clock emergency surgical facilities is critical to reduce delays in care and deaths, the researchers noted in an article online August 13 in the Lancet Global Health. But in 2010, just 43% of the Indian population lived within 50 kilometers (31 miles) of a well-resourced district hospital.

Many factors, including a lack of health literacy, limited financial resources, and significant geographic barriers to care can influence mortality, Dr. Prabhat Jha, professor of global health at the University of Toronto, told Reuters Health by email.

"These barriers typically affect the rural poor the most," Jha said.

To see how much geography influenced deaths from acute abdominal conditions, Dr. Jha and colleagues reviewed deaths by postal codes and categorized regions of high and low mortality.

Then the researchers mapped out how far people lived from "well-resourced" district hospitals - that is, facilities with 24-hour surgical and anesthesia services, critical care beds, a blood bank, and basic laboratory and radiology departments.

Areas with deaths from acute abdominal conditions were more likely to be poorer, have lower use of gas or other liquid fuels for cooking, and slightly lower household density.

About four in five of these deaths were from peptic ulcer disease. Half of the dead were no older than 53, and almost two- thirds were men.

Only one in five deaths occurred in a hospital. More than four-fifths happened in rural areas.

The hospital deaths suggest that at least some of the dying patients sought care but may have waited too long, lived too far from a hospital to get there quickly, or reached a facility that wasn't equipped to treat them, Jha said.

"This finding is very important for health services planning," Jha added. "There can be a tendency in emerging economies to focus on building flagship tertiary hospitals in the cities, and, in fact, India delivers advanced, world-class care in many of its large city hospitals. But to prevent deaths from common, treatable surgical conditions such as appendicitis, well-resourced community or district hospitals that are close to the population they serve are really what is needed."

In an accompanying editorial, Drs. Nobhojit Roy and Monty U. Khajanchi of BARC Hospital, Mumbai, noted that the problem of patients showing up late and critically ill to hospitals is common in low- and middle-income countries. As a result, surgery is associated in these countries with high mortality and generally poor outcomes.

Building more hospitals doesn't necessarily mean people will come, Dr. Adam Kushner, founder and director of Surgeons OverSeas who has researched access to care in developing countries, told Reuters Health by email.

"We found that even in the most removed villages, people understood the need for surgery and surgical care, but that mistrust with the health care system or the high cost of care or travel would preclude their seeking assistance," Kushner said.

One limitation of the study, the researchers acknowledged, is the use of postal codes, which may not always provide an accurate way to measure the distance people live from the hospital.

However, the authors also suggested that the findings for acute abdominal conditions would hold true for other health problems requiring emergency surgery where the same level of hospital care would be necessary to increase patients' survival odds.

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, and Canadian Institute of Health Research funded this research.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1MeZWGO and http://bit.ly/1M0ickw

Lancet Glob Health 2015.

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