বুধবার, ৮ মে, ২০১৩

Medical Equipment Donated to Developing Nations Usually Ends Up on the Junk Heap

Despite good intentions, life-saving medical donations often end up discarded or broken. New training programs aim to change all that


Donated medical lamp lies unused at a hospital in Managua, Nicaragua. Image: Robert Malkin

Medical equipment donations enable hospitals in developing countries to get their hands on expensive and much-needed technology. But there?s a growing concern that those donations do more harm than good. Hallways and closets often become cluttered with unused or broken-down equipment for which locals lack parts or training in how to make repairs. Outdated electrical systems groan under the strain of large medical devices, possibly compromising a hospital?s power.

?I think there is a great risk for every medical device donation that it?s going to hurt the recipient,? says Robert Malkin, a professor of the practice of biomedical engineering at Duke University.

Recently, a study of seven hospitals in Haiti found only 30 percent of the 115 pieces of medical equipment donated after the 2010 earthquake were working and 14 percent of the equipment could not be repaired. The study also found that some donated devices, such as incubators for premature babies, could never work in the hospitals, because they required a higher electrical voltage than is standard in Haiti.

The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates (pdf) that as much as 80 percent of medical equipment in some countries is donated or funded through foreign sources, but only 10 percent to 30 percent of the donations are ever put into operation. ?There is no question that you can donate effectively,? Malkin says, adding the caveat that it takes a lot of effort to make sure everything is done right. For example, Malkin says organizations need to know what recipient hospitals or countries need. They also need to ensure the recipients have access to the right accessories and supplies to make the devices work properly. People need to be trained to use the equipment. And, of course, it also has to be shipped, delivered and installed. ?That?s a lot of things to get right, and you need to do that with every piece of equipment,? he says.

Addressing the problem
Currently, WHO spells out the four principles of a good medical equipment donation (pdf): respect the recipient?s request; assure the donation will benefit the recipient; keep an open line of communication; and ensure quality. Malkin is part of the group tasked with rewriting those principles, which have not been updated since 2000. ?We?ve tried to shift a lot more responsibility to the recipient,? Malkin says. Hospitals and medical centers requesting medical equipment donations would be expected to make sure they can repair the devices and get spare parts, he adds. Some countries have already stepped in to put a stop to donations of used medical equipment and devices from other countries. For example, some don?t allow incubators nor x-ray and dialysis machines to be shipped to their hospitals.

But Malkin says even new medical device donations come with risks for recipients, including not having access to the right spare parts such as the correct operating-room lightbulbs. ?These are not trivial parts to find,? he notes. Instead, he says his organization, Engineering World Health (EWH), which works to improve care at hospitals in the developing world, has stopped shipping a lot of equipment overseas. ?In EWH we feel that it?s more powerful to train the staff of the hospital to fix the equipment they have. So we ship very little new equipment,? he says.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=1b4171e4c94d166bc03c434d6bd4e210

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