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Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence

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Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence
PredecessorBurden of Surgical Disease Working Group
HeadquartersLupsingen, Switzerland
Parent organization
International Surgery Society

The Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence is a multidisciplinary society of surgeons, anesthesiologists, obstetricians and public health specialists organized to improve the delivery of surgical care, particularly in low and middle income countries.[1] The body, named the Burden of Surgical Disease Working Group at its founding in 2007, was renamed in 2010. It became an international society in 2013 under the umbrella of the International Surgery Society.

History

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The working group has collaborated with global health institutions such as the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery,[2][3] World Health Organization's Global Initiative for Emergency and Essential Surgical Care, The World Federation of Societies of Anaesthesiologists, The President and Fellows of Harvard College,[4] The American College of Surgeons, Operation Giving Back , the Disease Control Priorities Network,[5] and the International Surgical Society.[6] The World Journal of Surgery became the official journal of the working group early in the group's tenure, and has published an abundance of data and reports on rural and international surgery. The inaugural meeting of the Burden of Surgical Disease Working Group was hosted by the University of Washington in 2008. Subsequent meetings were hosted by The American College of Surgeons, Operation Giving Back in 2009 and Vanderbilt University in 2010.[7]

References

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  1. ^ McQueen, Kelly; Bickler, Stephen W. (July 2013). "Proceedings of the 4th Annual Meeting of the Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence (ASAP): Building Sustainable Surgical Systems". World Journal of Surgery. 37 (7): 1460–61. doi:10.1007/s00268-013-2033-6. PMC 4377506. PMID 23592056.
  2. ^ Mock, Charles N.; Donkor, Peter; Gawande, Atul; Jamison, Dean T.; Kruk, Margaret E.; Debas, Haile T. (June 2015). "Essential surgery: key messages from Disease Control Priorities". The Lancet. 385 (9983) (3rd ed.): 2209–19. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60091-5. PMC 7004823. PMID 25662414.
  3. ^ Meara, John G.; et al. (April 2015). "Global Surgery 2030: evidence and solutions for achieving health, welfare, and economic development". The Lancet. 386 (9993): 569–624. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60160-X. PMID 25924834.
  4. ^ McQueen, KA Kelly; Ozgediz, Doruk; Riviello, Robert; Hsia, Renee Y; Jayaraman, Sudha; Sullivan, Stephen R; Meara, John G (June 2010). "Essential surgery: Integral to the right to health". Health and Human Rights. 12 (1): 137–152. JSTOR healhumarigh.12.1.137.
  5. ^ Debas, Haile T.; Donkor, Peter; Gawande, Atul; Jamison, Dean T.; Kruk, Margaret E.; Mock, Charles N. (Mar 23, 2015). Disease Control Priorities, Third Edition (Volume 1): Essential Surgery (3rd ed.). World Bank Publications.
  6. ^ "ASAP Advocacy". The Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence. JMC Studios, Inc. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  7. ^ "ASAP History". The Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence. JMC Studios, Inc. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
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