Epidemiologist Dr. Richard Niederman of the NYU College of Dentistry advocates for caries prevention; co-authors DCP3’s dentistry chapter

Dr. Richard Niederman
Dr. Richard Niederman, NYU College of Dentistry professor and chair of Epidemiology and Health Promotion, co-author of DCP3’s dentistry chapter.

Epidemiologist Dr. Richard Niederman of the NYU College of Dentistry advocates for caries prevention; co-authors DCP3’s dentistry chapter

Improving access to surgical care could save 1.5 million lives per year in poor countries, according to findings released today by the Disease Control Priorities Network at University of Washington’s Department of Global Health.

Published by the World Bank Group, the Disease Control Priorities (DCP3) Essential Surgery volume examines new evidence for the unmet need and potential impact of surgery on saving lives in low- and middle-income countries. DCP3 expands on the seminal findings from the second edition (2006) of DCP2 by showing that by providing surgery for road traffic injuries, obstetric emergencies, and common ailments like cataracts, poor countries could gain $10 worth of health benefits for every $1 invested.

“In Essential Surgery, we have identified 44 essential surgical procedures which should be readily available in low- and middle-income countries,” said volume editor and University of California, San Francisco Professor Haile Debas “Most of these procedures can be performed in first-level hospitals by multidisciplinary teams of surgeons, anesthesiologists, nurses and other healthcare providers. Investment in first-level hospitals is critical because they are the most important sites for essential surgical care delivery.”

In addition to the volume’s overall review of essential key surgical elements, prevention can reduce the need for surgery.

“If community health care workers provided comprehensive prevention for caries and periodontitis they could reduce the need for dental surgery by almost 80 percent,” said Dr. Richard Niederman, NYU College of Dentistry professor and chair of Epidemiology and Health Promotion, co-author of DCP3’s dentistry chapter.

DCP3 volume editor and University of Washington Professor of Medicine Dr. Charles Mock hopes the volume will change how surgery is viewed in terms of global health priorities.

“The essential package addresses the highest priority surgical conditions: those with large health burdens and for which there are surgical procedures that are cost-effective and eminently feasible to provide universally” says Mock. “Moreover, essential surgical procedures are among the most cost-effective of all health interventions, on the same level of cost-effectiveness as immunizations, bed nets, anti-retroviral therapy for HIV, and other interventions that have received wide attention and investment globally. Similar investment in making essential surgery universally available would contribute to significant improvements in health globally.”

The volume will be released at the Consortium of Universities in Global Health conference in Boston, MA. Speakers include volume editors and authors who provided critical leadership throughout the writing and production process. The full series will be comprised of nine individual volumes that will be published in 2015-2016.

DCP3 Press Contact: Brianne Adderley info@dcp-3.org

For more information, visit www.dcp-3.org and follow DCP3 on Twitter using @DCPthree

About New York University College of Dentistry--New York University College of Dentistry (NYUCD) is the third oldest and the largest dental school in the US, educating more than 8 percent of all dentists. NYUCD has a significant global reach and provides a level of national and international diversity among its students that is unmatched by any other dental school. http://www.nyu.edu/dental/

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