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The South-South partnership to provide cardiac surgery: The Namibian Children Heart Project

Introduction: Congenital and acquired heart diseases are highly prevalent in developing countries despite limited specialised care. Namibia established a paediatric cardiac service in 2009 with significant human resource and infrastructural constraints. Therefore, patients are referred for cardiac i...

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Main Author: Shidhika, Fenny Fiindje
Other Authors: Zühlke, Liesl Joanna
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Paediatrics and Child Health 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Shidhika, Fenny Fiindje
author2 Zühlke, Liesl Joanna
author_browse Shidhika, Fenny Fiindje
Zühlke, Liesl Joanna
author_facet Zühlke, Liesl Joanna
Shidhika, Fenny Fiindje
author_sort Shidhika, Fenny Fiindje
collection Thesis
description Introduction: Congenital and acquired heart diseases are highly prevalent in developing countries despite limited specialised care. Namibia established a paediatric cardiac service in 2009 with significant human resource and infrastructural constraints. Therefore, patients are referred for cardiac interventions to South Africa. Objectives: To describe the diagnoses, clinical characteristics, interventions, post-operative morbidity and mortality and follow-up of patients referred for care. Methods: Demographics, diagnoses, interventions, intra- and postoperative morbidity and mortality as well as longitudinal follow-up data of all patients referred to South Africa were recorded and analysed. Results: The total cohort constituted 193 patients of which 179 (93%) had congenital and 7% acquired heart disease. The majority of patients (78.8%) travelled more than 400 km to Windhoek prior to transfer. There were 28 percutaneous interventions. Palliative and definitive surgery was performed in 27 and 129 patients respectively. Eighty (80/156, 51.3%) patients had postoperative complications, of which 15 (9.6%) were a direct complication of surgery. Surgical mortality was 8/156 (5.1%, 95% confidence interval 1.2.2-9.8), with a 30- day mortality of 3.2%. Prolonged ICU stay was associated with a 5% increased risk of death (Hazard Ratio 1.05, 95% confidence interval: 1.02-1.08, p=0.001). Follow-up was complete in 151 (78%) patients over seven years. Conclusions: Despite the challenges associated with a cardiac programme referring patients for intervention to a neighbouring country and the adverse characteristics of multiple lesions and complexity associated with late presentation, we report good surgical and interventional outcomes. Our goal remains to develop a comprehensive sustainable cardiac service in Namibia.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:37:29.824Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Department of Paediatrics and Child Health
publisherStr Department of Paediatrics and Child Health
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29683 The South-South partnership to provide cardiac surgery: The Namibian Children Heart Project Shidhika, Fenny Fiindje Zühlke, Liesl Joanna Hugo-Hamman, Christopher Paediatric Cardiology and Critical Care Introduction: Congenital and acquired heart diseases are highly prevalent in developing countries despite limited specialised care. Namibia established a paediatric cardiac service in 2009 with significant human resource and infrastructural constraints. Therefore, patients are referred for cardiac interventions to South Africa. Objectives: To describe the diagnoses, clinical characteristics, interventions, post-operative morbidity and mortality and follow-up of patients referred for care. Methods: Demographics, diagnoses, interventions, intra- and postoperative morbidity and mortality as well as longitudinal follow-up data of all patients referred to South Africa were recorded and analysed. Results: The total cohort constituted 193 patients of which 179 (93%) had congenital and 7% acquired heart disease. The majority of patients (78.8%) travelled more than 400 km to Windhoek prior to transfer. There were 28 percutaneous interventions. Palliative and definitive surgery was performed in 27 and 129 patients respectively. Eighty (80/156, 51.3%) patients had postoperative complications, of which 15 (9.6%) were a direct complication of surgery. Surgical mortality was 8/156 (5.1%, 95% confidence interval 1.2.2-9.8), with a 30- day mortality of 3.2%. Prolonged ICU stay was associated with a 5% increased risk of death (Hazard Ratio 1.05, 95% confidence interval: 1.02-1.08, p=0.001). Follow-up was complete in 151 (78%) patients over seven years. Conclusions: Despite the challenges associated with a cardiac programme referring patients for intervention to a neighbouring country and the adverse characteristics of multiple lesions and complexity associated with late presentation, we report good surgical and interventional outcomes. Our goal remains to develop a comprehensive sustainable cardiac service in Namibia. 2019-02-19T13:35:25Z 2019-02-19T13:35:25Z 2018 2019-02-19T10:46:16Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29683 eng application/pdf Department of Paediatrics and Child Health Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Paediatric Cardiology and Critical Care
Shidhika, Fenny Fiindje
The South-South partnership to provide cardiac surgery: The Namibian Children Heart Project
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The South-South partnership to provide cardiac surgery: The Namibian Children Heart Project
title_full The South-South partnership to provide cardiac surgery: The Namibian Children Heart Project
title_fullStr The South-South partnership to provide cardiac surgery: The Namibian Children Heart Project
title_full_unstemmed The South-South partnership to provide cardiac surgery: The Namibian Children Heart Project
title_short The South-South partnership to provide cardiac surgery: The Namibian Children Heart Project
title_sort south south partnership to provide cardiac surgery the namibian children heart project
topic Paediatric Cardiology and Critical Care
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29683
work_keys_str_mv AT shidhikafennyfiindje thesouthsouthpartnershiptoprovidecardiacsurgerythenamibianchildrenheartproject
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