BACKGROUND This review examines the application of intersectionality in surgical care within low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Intersectionality is an analytic lens that examines how overlapping social identities intersect within structural systems of power and inequality. In the context of health, it helps explain how these intersections shape people's exposure to risk, access to care, and overall outcomes. Applying this lens can help uncover cumulative disadvantages and inequities within surgical systems in LMICs. METHODS Following PRISMA guidelines, we conducted a comprehensive search across eight databases to identify studies examining the relationship between the intersection of at least two marginalized social dimensions and surgical care in LMICs. RESULTS From 7325 identified abstracts, 31 were included. While none explicitly mentioned intersectionality, an average of 4.3 social determinants were analyzed per study. The most frequently examined were income (100.0 %), location (87.1 %), gender/sex (77.4 %), and education (77.4 %). Beliefs were included in 54.8 % of studies. Other determinants, such as insurance, occupation, race/ethnicity, language, and caste, were less frequently reported. CONCLUSION Our findings support applying an intersectional lens to understand how social determinants interact, identify the most vulnerable groups, and inform targeted policies that address gaps in access to surgical care.
Intersectionality in surgical care in LMICs: A systematic scoping review.
A. Gerk,Shreenik Kundu,E. Guadagno,J. Seyi-olajide,Dunya Moghul,J. Bustorff-Silva,C. Camargo,D. Poenaru
Published 2025 in American Journal of Surgery
ABSTRACT
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- Publication year
2025
- Venue
American Journal of Surgery
- Publication date
2025-11-01
- Fields of study
Sociology, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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