Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has had significant impact on healthcare worldwide. Surgeons are at increased occupational risk of contracting COVID-19. The impact of the disease on surgical practice will continue to evolve. We assessed the impact of the disease on surgical practice and training in Nigeria.
Survey questionnaire was designed, transcribed to Google form and electronically circulated online to surgeons practicing in Nigeria. Surgeons from various subspecialties from the six regions in Nigeria were included. Survey questions pertaining to pre-COVID-19 era surgical practices, impact on current practice and changes occurring in health facilities during this COVID-19 pandemic. Responses were collated and analyzed statistically.
One hundred and nine (109) surgeons completed the survey, of which 2.8% were women. Majority (68.8%) of the respondents are in the consultant cadre, majority (86.2%) are working in public hospital, 88.1% running their SOPD, 81.7% have isolation wards in their centers, 66.1% have dedicated team for COVID-19 management. Only 48.6% of the frontline health workers have access to personal protective equipment (PPE), and 33.9% had formal training on the use of PPE. Only 11.0% were satisfied with level of preparation of the management. Elective cases were done only in 45% of respondents. 103(94.4 %) confirmed that the numbers of elective cases are less than pre Covid-19 period. Emergency cases were carried out by 93.6% of respondents. Only 1.8% of respondents carried out screening tests for their patients before embarking on emergency surgery.
COVID-19 has led to reduction in surgical outpatients, significant reduction in elective surgeries in Nigeria. Adequate PPE needs to be provided, there should be guidelines for safety for future. There should be adequate preparation should there be any pandemic in the near future.
Author Contributions
Copyright© 2022
Dele Ojo Owolabi, et al.
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Funding Interests:
Citation:
Introduction
The Corona virus infectious disease otherwise called COVID-19 is caused by a novel coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) formally called 2019 – n CoV, was first identified amid an outbreak of respiratory illness cases in Wuhan City, Hubei Province, China. It was initially reported to WHO on December 31, 2019. On January 30, 2020, the WHO declared the COVID-19 outbreak a global health emergency The illness caused by SAR-CoV2 was recently termed COVID-19 by WHO, the new acronym derived from coronavirus disease 2019. The name was chosen to avoid stigmatizing the virus’s origin in terms of population, geography or animal association. This COVID-19 infection is a highly contagious disease from man to man and it has constituted health emergency to the whole world and yet to have a definitive cure. Health workers, including surgeons are not spared in contacting this disease in the course of discharging their duty. As at 01/05/2020, worldwide, 3,269,667 have tested positive, 1,021,185 recovered and 233,560 deaths. In Nigeria 1,932 tested positive, 319 recovered and 58 deaths. The practice and lives of health workers including surgeons have been affected in many ways following the emergence of COVID-19 disease in Nigeria. This highly contagious disease has high morbidity and mortality with so many questions left to be answered.
Results
Out of 109 respondents, 106 (97.2%) were males while 3 (2.8%) were females given a female to male ratio of 1:35. The age group 41 -50 years has the highest responses and represents 49.5% of the respondents. Majority (68.8%) of the respondents are in the consultants’ cadre, 18.3% are Senior Registrars while 12.8% were Registrars. Majority (86.2%) are working with public hospitals, 2.8 % with private hospitals while 11.0% are working with both public and private hospitals. See
21 – 30
6
5.5
31 – 40
29
26.6
41 - 50
54
49.5
51 – 60
18
16.5
61+
2
1.8
Male
106
97.2
Female
3
2.8
Consultant
75
68.8
Senior Registrar
20
18.3
Registrar
14
12.9
1 – 5
28
25.7
6 – 10
39
35.8
11 – 15
23
21.1
16 – 20
9
8.3
20+
10
9.2
Public Hospital
94
86.2
Private Hospital
3
2.8
Both
12
11
Is your SOPD running?
96 (88.1)
13 (11.9)
Any Isolation ward
89 (81.7)
20(18.3)
Any dedicated team for covid -19
72 (66.1)
37(33.9)
PPE for frontline health workers
53(48.6)
56(51.4)
Satisfied level of preparedness
12(11.0)
97(89.0)
Formal training on infection control
64 (58.7)
45(41.3)
Formal training on use of PPE
37(33.9)
72(66.1)
Do you operate elective cases
49(45.0)
60(55.0)
No of elective cases less than pre Covid-19
103(94.4)
6(5.5)
Performing emergency operation
102(93.6)
7(6.4)
Do you test all emergency cases for Covid-19
2(1.8)
107(98.2)
Discussion
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by a newly discovered severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2).
Conclusion
COVID-19 has led to reduction in surgical outpatients, significant reduction in elective surgeries in Nigeria. Adequate PPE needs to be provided, there should be guidelines for safety for future. There should be adequate preparation should there be any pandemic in the near future.