Building Bridges for Broken Bones: Providing adequate treatment for extremity fracture patients in Shirati, rural Tanzania. A study on the safety, efficacy and acceptability of a collaborative triage & treatment model for extremity fracture patients, involving traditional bone setters

Joost Binnerts 2022

“Orthopaedic care in rural areas like Shirati is limitedly available, so fracture patients often seek out the help of ‘bonesetters’: traditional healers that treat fractures through splinting and massage. Patients with simple fracture are generally treated adequately and at a cheap price, and are often satisfied with this mode of treatment. Complex or open fractures (with a wound), however, require surgery; a service that bonesetters can’t provide. It’s this group of patients that often presents at a late stage with complications, like badly healed bones, or severe infections. Bonesetters are often well aware of their limitations, but don’t have little access to pain medication, X-ray imaging or sterile equipment.

To combine the best of both worlds, we are conducting a pilot study to assess the efficacy of a collaborative triage & treatment protocol with three bonesetters, the general principles being: bonesetter treatment for patients with simple fractures, hospital treatment for patients with complex fractures, and adequate pain management and X-ray imaging for all. To contribute or learn more about the bonesetter project, please visit our webpage: https://stichtingshirati.nl/bonesetter-project/?lang=en

Click here to read the final narrative report.

Article World Journal of Surgery