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AbstractBackgroundSafe and effective care for surgical patients requires high‐quality perioperative care. In high‐income countries (HICs), care pathways have been shown to be effective in standardizing clinical practice to optimize patient outcomes. Little is known about their use in low‐ and middle‐income countries (LMICs) where perioperative mortality is substantially higher.MethodsSystematic review and narrative synthesis to identify and describe studies in peer‐reviewed journals on the implementation or evaluation of perioperative care pathways in LMICs. Searches were conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL Plus, WHO Global Index, Web of Science, Scopus, Global Health and SciELO alongside citation searching. Descriptive statistics, taxonomy classifications and framework analyses were used to summarize the setting, outcome measures, implementation strategies, and facilitators and barriers to implementation.ResultsTwenty‐seven studies were included. The majority of pathways were set in tertiary hospitals in lower‐middle‐income countries and were focused on elective surgery. Only six studies were assessed as high quality. Most pathways were adapted from international guidance and had been implemented in a single hospital. The most commonly reported barriers to implementation were cost of interventions and lack of available resources.ConclusionsStudies from a geographically diverse set of low and lower‐middle‐income countries demonstrate increasing use of perioperative pathways adapted to resource‐poor settings, though there is sparsity of literature from low‐income countries, first‐level hospitals and emergency surgery. As in HICs, addressing patient and clinician beliefs is a major challenge in improving care. Context‐relevant and patient‐centered research, including qualitative and implementation studies, would make a valuable contribution to existing knowledge.

Original publication

DOI

10.1007/s00268-022-06621-x

Type

Journal article

Journal

World Journal of Surgery

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

09/2022

Volume

46

Pages

2102 - 2113