➢ Open fractures are a critical global health challenge that disproportionately affect individuals in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), primarily due to road traffic collisions. Surgical management of open fractures is 1 of the 3 essential bellwether procedures identified by The Lancet Commission on Global Surgery. ➢ We developed and evaluated a novel hybrid course on open fracture management for surgical trainees and practicing surgeons in Rwanda, combining a self-directed, virtual, pre-course curriculum with a live, in-person workshop in Kigali in June 2025 that was simultaneously live-streamed for virtual attendees. Prerecorded multilingual lectures (English and French) and curated peer-reviewed articles provided foundational knowledge in advance and prepared learners for in-person didactics, case discussions, and skills training. ➢ The in-person workshop included didactic sessions and discussions of local clinical cases from Rwanda related to open fracture management and other orthopaedic emergencies, along with hands-on practice in fracture external fixation and negative pressure wound therapy using affordable devices designed for resource-constrained practice. ➢ The workshop engaged 160 active learners (37 in-person, 123 virtual) and demonstrated high overall satisfaction among 84 survey respondents, with an average rating of 4.6 out of 5. ➢ Self-reported confidence in managing open fractures increased substantially following the course, from a mean rating of 3.83 to 4.69 on a 5-point scale (p < 0.001). Most survey respondents reported that the course moderately or significantly improved their knowledge (96.4%) and would change their clinical practice (96.5%). ➢ Participant feedback highlighted opportunities for improvement, including extending the workshop duration to increase hands-on time, expanding the content on complex soft-tissue management, and improving the engagement of remote learners through mechanisms such as the provision of low-cost external fixation models for at-home practice. ➢ Future directions include integrating the course into medical student and general practitioner education in Rwanda, adapting it for major surgical conferences regionally and internationally, and continuing to prioritize hands-on training modules. Iterative refinement of the course is planned on the basis of participant feedback.
Kadiyala et al. (Mon,) studied this question.