# Surgical Disease Burden, Outcomes, and Roles of Non-Physician Clinicians in Ugandan Emergency Departments

**Authors:** Stacey Chamberlain, Pearl Ugwu-Dike, Ronald Mbiine, Thomas Sims, Brian T Rice

PMC · DOI: 10.5811/westjem.24989 · Western Journal of Emergency Medicine · 2025-07-12

## TL;DR

Emergency surgical patients make up a significant portion of emergency department visits in Uganda, with many procedures performed by non-physician clinicians.

## Contribution

This study quantifies the surgical disease burden and role of non-physician clinicians in Ugandan emergency departments.

## Key findings

- 22.5% of all emergency department patients required surgical care, with fractures and lacerations being the most common diagnoses.
- Non-physician clinicians performed 12.1% of all surgical procedures, including suturing and fracture management.
- The three-day mortality rate for surgical patients was 2.8%, highlighting the severity of these cases.

## Abstract

Delivery of emergency surgical care remains a challenge in much of Sub-Saharan Africa, with physician shortages in Uganda resulting in only one surgeon per 100,000 people. Emergency units in Uganda receive emergency surgical patients, but it is unknown how great of a burden these emergency surgical patients represent in terms of total number, care required, or outcomes.

We performed a retrospective review of a quality assurance database for all patients treated at two emergency units in Uganda from 2009–2019. Patients were defined as “surgical” if they were admitted directly to the operating theatre, received a surgical diagnosis, or received an emergency surgical procedure as identified by the Disease Control Priorities 3 (DCP3) group. We generated descriptive statistics.

Of the 109,999 total patients seen, 24,745 (22.5%) were emergency surgical patients. Surgical patients were predominantly male (71.7%) with a mean age of 34.9 years. Most surgical patients (57.0%) were admitted to the hospital, while 38.9% were discharged, and only 1.7% were sent directly to the operating theatre. In total, 12.1% of all patients seen in the emergency unit received a surgical procedure from a non-physician clinician while in the unit. Of the surgical procedures, the most common were suturing of lacerations (51.8%), urinary catheterization (24.5%), fracture management (16.5%), and incision and drainage of abscesses (6.0%). Among surgical patients, the most common surgical diagnoses were for fractures (30.9%), lacerations (29.6%), and abscesses (8.8%). The overall three-day mortality for emergency surgical patients was 2.8%.

Emergency surgical patients are common in Ugandan emergency units, where emergent surgical procedures are commonly performed by non-physician clinicians. Strengthening system capacity for emergency surgical patients should also consider emergency unit resources.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** fracture (MESH:D050723), lacerations (MESH:D022125), abscesses (MESH:D000038)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

24 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12342435/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12342435