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Clinicians, NGOs, funders and academics (among others) in global health are accustomed to discussion of the "low-resource setting". Commonly, the resources implicit in this term are physical (equipment, drugs) and infrastructural (electricity, water and sanitation) in nature. Human resources are well recognised as scarce in this context too, and the focus in most "workforce" research is on the number, distribution and/or training of healthcare workers. In this article, we make the case for closer examination of "social resource" as necessary to patient safety and distinct from simple enumeration of available/trained personnel. We use the clinical specialty of anaesthesia as a case study, identifying the different ways in which social resource is necessary to enable safe practice for anaesthesia providers, and the potential challenges to accessing social resource relevant in the low- and middle-income context. Finally, we suggest ways in which social resource for anaesthesia professionals in LMICs might be meaningfully investigated, with a view to improving its priority and access for safe anaesthesia care worldwide.

Original publication

DOI

10.3389/frhs.2025.1625409

Type

Journal article

Journal

Frontiers in health services

Publication Date

01/2025

Volume

5

Addresses

Nuffield Department of Medicine, Health Systems Collaborative, Centre for Global Health Research, Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom.