Australia's invaluable help in reducing Mongolia's surgical mortality rates - News.MN

Australia’s invaluable help in reducing Mongolia’s surgical mortality rates

Old News! Published on: 2018.05.30

Australia’s invaluable help in reducing Mongolia’s surgical mortality rates

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For decades, anaesthesia training in Mongolia has been neglected. As recently as the 1980s there was limited formal academic training for anaesthetists, with the country’s few specialists passing on their imperfect knowledge ‘on the job’. For surgery patients, this meant more risks and, in some rural hospitals, enduring a procedure without any anaesthetic.

Inconsistent and inadequate training, a lack of up-to-date educational resources and some reluctance to learn from the West all played a role in anaesthesia being overlooked as a critical element of medical care.

But times are changing. More anaesthetists are graduating from recognised, comprehensive training programs and this is having a tangible effect on the health of the Mongolian people. And Australian experts are helping, by providing on-the-ground training and education programs.

The collaboration is working, with surgical mortality rates being cut by more than half and a growing number of health and medical workers choosing to graduate as anaesthetists and taking their newfound knowledge into rural and regional Mongolia.

Modern health services in Mongolia began during the 1920s after the country gained independence from China. The Soviet Union joined the Mongolians’ battle for independence and maintained a strong influence over the next 70 years. This influence extended to the rapidly expanding Mongolian health service that was based on a model developed by Nikolai Semashko, Commissar of Health in Moscow. But the Semashko model and its focus on developing a large hospital and clinical network had adverse consequences on anaesthesia education and practice.

The first wave of Mongolian anaesthetists in the 1960s received only four months of training. For the next 20 years, anaesthesia training remained inconsistent and unstructured. Senior anaesthetists at a few training hospitals passed on their limited knowledge – compounding omissions and errors. Slipping out for tea and vodka while new trainees carried out procedures was a common occurence.

By the beginning of the 21st century, the country’s anaesthesia practice was under pressure. There were only 106 anaesthetists nationwide and an increasing exodus of senior anaesthetists from the profession. The governing body, the Mongolian Society of Anesthesiologists (MSA), was regarded as disorganised and lacking in education and advocacy.

But since 2001, doctors from the Australian Society of Anaesthetists (ASA) have been supporting the development of Mongolia’s anaesthesia profession, visiting for 10 to 14 days every year to provide seminars and courses in emergency medicine, pain management and primary trauma care, as well as hospital teaching visits in the capital, Ulaanbaatar, and the regional secondary-level hospitals.

In 2008, the MSA and ASA signed a memorandum of understanding – Anaesthesia Advancement in Mongolia – and drew up a strategic plan to establish the country’s own training programs. The first group joined the Mongolian training program in 2009. Since then, 28-30 trainees each year have passed the program and continue to practice in Mongolia.

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