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Understanding the Global and Regional Landscape of Fractures, and the Impact of Sex on Hospital Admission Delays, in Women Across 17 Low and Middle-Income CountriesPouramin, Panthea January 2018 (has links)
Musculoskeletal trauma including fractures, represents a significant burden of disease for Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs). Within LMICs, women possess reduced agency to make health care decisions and represent a vulnerable population. In this thesis, I aimed to characterize priority fractures among women within LMICs, and investigated whether women were delayed in hospital admission following an orthopaedic trauma. In Chapter 1, I introduce and review the existing literature on injury burden, health care deficiencies, and gender inequities within LMICs.
In Chapter 2, we analyzed regional distributions of fracture burdens across 9,934 female orthopaedic trauma patients across 17 LMICs. Half of our study patients were ≥ 60 years old. We determined that the major burden of orthopaedic trauma among women within LMICs were fractures among the elderly. Fracture burden in Africa was notably different. A majority of patients were between the ages 18-59, and common fractures included tibia/fibula and femur fractures.
In Chapter 3, we analyzed 26,910 orthopaedic trauma patients across 17 LMICs to determine whether women were delayed in hospital admission by >24 hours. After controlling for confounds, sex was not a significant predictor of delay. We found that instead, the severity and type of fracture influenced the delay of patient’s hospital admission. Closed fractures, falling-related injuries, pelvic, spine and hip fractures were associated with increasing delay. Irrespective of sex and region, inter-hospital referrals accounted for nearly half of the reasons patients were delayed.
These two chapters highlight regional trends in orthopaedic burden sustained by women, pointing to the high frequency of fragility fractures. In addition, this thesis identifies critical gaps within LMICs’ health care systems infrastructure, demonstrating the need for improved hospital referral systems and ambulatory services. This analysis will enable policymakers, and future researchers to target interventions to address the rising global burden of injuries especially among women. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc) / Fractures represent life-threatening injuries within Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs), and globally are a top-ten leading cause of death and disability. Within LMICs, due to gender inequalities, women may be restricted from receiving hospital care following an injury. We investigated the most common types of fractures in women within LMICs and determined that women most frequently experienced fractures due to old age. We further examined whether women were delayed in reaching a hospital after sustaining a fracture, and found that sex did not significantly play a role in determining delay. Instead, injury associated factors, such as the type and severity of the fracture influenced whether a patient was delayed. In addition, transferring patients between hospitals was the most common reason for delay. As a result, policymakers in LMICs should explore strategies to treat the high burden of fractures in the elderly and improve communication between hospitals to reduce delays.
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