Emmanuel M. Makasa
1,2*1 Republic of Zambia, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Lusaka, Zambia.
2 School of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Abstract
National level experiences, lessons learnt from the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) era coupled with the
academic evidence and proposals generated by the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery (LCoGS) together with
the economic arguments and recommendations from the World Bank Group’s “Essential Surgery” Disease Control
Priorities (DCP3) publication, provided the impetus for political commitments to improve surgical care capacity
at the primary level of the healthcare system in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) as part of their drive
towards universal health coverage (UHC) in the form of World Health Organization (WHO) Resolution A68.15.
This global commitment from governments must be followed up with development of a Global Action Plan and
a global coordination mechanism supported by regional implementation frameworks on the part of the WHO in
order for the organisation to better coordinate all stakeholders and sustain the technical support needed to develop
and implement national surgical health policy in the form of National Surgical Obstetric and Anaesthesia Plans
(NSOAPs). As expounded by Gajewski et al, data and research output on surgical care is essential to informing
policy development and programme implementation. This area still remains a challenge in sub-Saharan Africa
(SSA) but it is envisaged that countries will include this key component in their ongoing national surgical healthcare
policy development and programme implementation. In the Zambian case study, research in the area of Global
Surgery investment-the surgical workforce scale-up is used to demonstrate the important role of implementation
research in the development and implementation of the Zambian NSOAP as well as the need for international
collaborations to this end. Scale-up reviews informed by implementation research to evaluate progress on the
commitments contained in Resolution A68.15 and Decision A70.22 are essential to sustain the momentum and
to help maintain focus on the gaps in all countries. There are opportunities for non-state actors especially local
sub-regional academic institutions, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and private sector to play a key role
in surgical healthcare policy development and implementation research. Collection of and better information
management of standardised surgical care indicators is essential for such research, for bi-annual WHO progress
reporting and for demonstration of impact to justify and encourage further investments in surgical care.