# Artificial intelligence for surgical care in war-torn sudan: Feasibility, barriers, and ethical perspectives from a conflict zone

**Authors:** Alsadig Suliman, Lina SeedAhmed, Sara Hussein, Siddig Ali, Sabah Ahmed, Alkhansa Alkhider

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.sipas.2026.100333 · Surgery in Practice and Science · 2026-02-15

## TL;DR

Sudanese surgeons during active conflict show moderate awareness of AI but face major barriers like poor infrastructure and unreliable power, yet they see potential for AI in triage and resource allocation.

## Contribution

First study evaluating AI feasibility and ethical considerations in surgical care within an active conflict zone in Africa.

## Key findings

- Sudanese surgeons show moderate AI awareness but minimal hands-on experience due to infrastructure and training limitations.
- AI is perceived as most useful for training, triage, and decision support in resource-constrained conflict settings.
- Offline-capable AI tools and ethical governance are critical for successful deployment in fragile surgical systems.

## Abstract

•Mixed-methods assessment of AI awareness, readiness, and perceived barriers among Sudanese surgeons working during active armed conflict.•Findings show moderate conceptual awareness of AI but very limited hands-on exposure, with training, infrastructure, and power/connectivity constraints predominating.•Surgeons most frequently identified potential AI applications in training, emergency triage, perioperative decision support, and resource allocation under severe constraints.•Qualitative and quantitative integration highlights the need for offline-capable, context-adapted AI tools and clear ethical governance in fragile surgical systems.

Mixed-methods assessment of AI awareness, readiness, and perceived barriers among Sudanese surgeons working during active armed conflict.

Findings show moderate conceptual awareness of AI but very limited hands-on exposure, with training, infrastructure, and power/connectivity constraints predominating.

Surgeons most frequently identified potential AI applications in training, emergency triage, perioperative decision support, and resource allocation under severe constraints.

Qualitative and quantitative integration highlights the need for offline-capable, context-adapted AI tools and clear ethical governance in fragile surgical systems.

Artificial intelligence (AI) offers transformative potential for clinical care, yet its deployment in conflict-affected, low-resource settings remains under-researched. This study evaluates AI awareness, barriers, and readiness among Sudanese surgeons amidst the nation's ongoing armed conflict.

A sequential explanatory mixed-methods design was employed. An online survey, adapted from validated instruments, assessed AI familiarity, perceived barriers, ethical concerns, and readiness among Sudanese general surgery residents and specialists. From October 2024 to June 2025, 185 completed responses were obtained from a stratified random sample of 195 eligible participants. Follow-up semi-structured interviews were conducted with 20 selected specialists. Quantitative data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, chi-square tests, and the Kruskal-Wallis test with Dunn’s post-hoc comparisons. Qualitative interviews were conducted until thematic saturation was achieved and analyzed thematically, with coding verified through inter-coder reliability.

While AI awareness was moderate (68.7%), practical clinical exposure (9.4%) and advanced literacy (10.3%) were notably low. Surgeons identified AI’s primary utility in training (68.2%) and perioperative decision-making (65.4%). Significant barriers included infrastructure deficits (87.6%), training gaps (79.1%), and financial constraints (72.4%). Conflict-specific challenges were acute, with 92.5% reporting severe technology shortages and 78.3% citing unreliable power/internet. Qualitative themes highlighted AI’s potential for triage and resource allocation, though concerns regarding accountability and ethical governance persisted.

This study provides inaugural evidence on AI feasibility within an African zone. Despite infrastructure collapse, Sudanese surgeons show strong interest in AI for triage and diagnostics. To move forward, development must prioritize offline-compatible, context-adapted tools and robust governance frameworks. These findings provide a blueprint for integrating AI to bolster surgical resilience during humanitarian crises.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** liver cancer (MESH:D006528), intra-abdominal hemorrhage (MESH:D000082122), AI (MESH:C538142), bleeding (MESH:D006470), cancer (MESH:D009369), Bias reduction (MESH:D015431), trauma (MESH:D014947), Sudan's collapse (MESH:D001261), fractures (MESH:D050723), colorectal cancer (MESH:D015179)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12937154/full.md

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12937154/full.md

## References

32 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12937154/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12937154