Robotic and Laparoscopic Inguinal Hernia Repair in Africa: Current Adoption, Challenges, and Future Horizons
Adebayo Falola, Murtaja Satea, Pedro Vega Guillen, Rodolfo J. Oviedo

TL;DR
Laparoscopic and robotic hernia repair are underused in Africa due to cost, training, and resource challenges, but progress is possible with investment and training.
Contribution
This paper reviews the current state and challenges of robotic and laparoscopic hernia repair adoption in Africa.
Findings
Only 3.3% of hernia repairs in sub-Saharan Africa use laparoscopic techniques.
Robotic hernia repair has not yet been reported in Africa.
Training, cost, and resource allocation are major barriers to adoption.
Abstract
Inguinal hernia repair is one of the most common surgical procedures performed globally. Laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair (LIHR) is recognized globally to be effective and safe, with advantages over open surgery, but its implementation across the African continent has been slow, with only 12 countries reporting implementation, and only 3.3% of inguinal hernia repairs in sub-Saharan Africa performed using laparoscopic techniques. Robotic surgery, although still emerging within the continent, with around 20 robots primarily used in urology across South Africa, Egypt, Morocco, Angola, and Tunisia, no reports of robotic inguinal hernia repair currently exist. Progress, however, is being observed with the growing interest from surgical societies, private-sector robotic expansion, and humanitarian missions introducing mesh-based and limited laparoscopic procedures. Limitations include the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Health and Surgery · Surgical Simulation and Training · Hernia repair and management
