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Patient outcome of emergency laparotomy improved with increasing “number of surgeons on-call” in a university hospital: Audit loop

AIM: Emergency laparotomy is a commonly performed high-mortality surgical procedure. The National Emergency Laparotomy Network (NELA) published an average mortality rate of 11.1% and a median length of stay equivalent to 16.3 days in patients undergoing emergency laparotomy. This study presents a co...

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Autores principales: Hussain, Anwar, Mahmood, Fahad, Teng, Chui, Jafferbhoy, Sadaf, Luke, David, Tsiamis, Achilleas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5633340/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29021897
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2017.09.013
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author Hussain, Anwar
Mahmood, Fahad
Teng, Chui
Jafferbhoy, Sadaf
Luke, David
Tsiamis, Achilleas
author_facet Hussain, Anwar
Mahmood, Fahad
Teng, Chui
Jafferbhoy, Sadaf
Luke, David
Tsiamis, Achilleas
author_sort Hussain, Anwar
collection PubMed
description AIM: Emergency laparotomy is a commonly performed high-mortality surgical procedure. The National Emergency Laparotomy Network (NELA) published an average mortality rate of 11.1% and a median length of stay equivalent to 16.3 days in patients undergoing emergency laparotomy. This study presents a completed audit loop after implementing the change of increasing the number of on-call surgeons in the general surgery rota of a university hospital. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcomes of emergency laparotomy in a single UK tertiary centre after addition of one more consultant in the daily on-call rota. METHODS: This is a retrospective study involving patients who underwent emergency laparotomy between March to May 2013 (first audit) and June to August 2015 (second audit). The study parameters stayed the same. The adult patients undergoing emergency laparotomy under the general surgical take were included. Appendicectomy, cholecystectomy and simple inguinal hernia repair patients were excluded. Data was collected on patient demographics, ASA, morbidity, 30-day mortality and length of hospital stay. Statistical analysis including logistic regression was performed using SPSS. RESULTS: During the second 3-month period, 123 patients underwent laparotomy compared to 84 in the first audit. Median age was 65(23–93) years. 56.01% cases were ASA III or above in the re-audit compared to 41.9% in the initial audit. 38% patients had bowel anastomosis compared to 35.7% in the re-audit with 4.2% leak rate in the re-audit compared to 16.6% in the first audit. 30-day mortality was 10.50% in the re-audit compared to 21% and median length of hospital stay 11 days in the re-audit compared to 16 days. The lower ASA grade was significantly associated with increased likelihood of being alive, as was being female, younger age and not requiring ITU admission post-operatively. However, having a second on-call consultant was 2.231 times more likely to increase the chances of patients not dying (p = 0.031). CONCLUSION: Our audit-loop suggests that adding a second consultant to the daily on-call rota significantly reduces postoperative mortality and morbidity. Age, ASA and ITU admission are other independent factors affecting patient outcomes. We suggest this change be applied to other high volume centres across the country to improve the outcomes after emergency laparotomy.
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spelling pubmed-56333402017-10-11 Patient outcome of emergency laparotomy improved with increasing “number of surgeons on-call” in a university hospital: Audit loop Hussain, Anwar Mahmood, Fahad Teng, Chui Jafferbhoy, Sadaf Luke, David Tsiamis, Achilleas Ann Med Surg (Lond) Original Research AIM: Emergency laparotomy is a commonly performed high-mortality surgical procedure. The National Emergency Laparotomy Network (NELA) published an average mortality rate of 11.1% and a median length of stay equivalent to 16.3 days in patients undergoing emergency laparotomy. This study presents a completed audit loop after implementing the change of increasing the number of on-call surgeons in the general surgery rota of a university hospital. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcomes of emergency laparotomy in a single UK tertiary centre after addition of one more consultant in the daily on-call rota. METHODS: This is a retrospective study involving patients who underwent emergency laparotomy between March to May 2013 (first audit) and June to August 2015 (second audit). The study parameters stayed the same. The adult patients undergoing emergency laparotomy under the general surgical take were included. Appendicectomy, cholecystectomy and simple inguinal hernia repair patients were excluded. Data was collected on patient demographics, ASA, morbidity, 30-day mortality and length of hospital stay. Statistical analysis including logistic regression was performed using SPSS. RESULTS: During the second 3-month period, 123 patients underwent laparotomy compared to 84 in the first audit. Median age was 65(23–93) years. 56.01% cases were ASA III or above in the re-audit compared to 41.9% in the initial audit. 38% patients had bowel anastomosis compared to 35.7% in the re-audit with 4.2% leak rate in the re-audit compared to 16.6% in the first audit. 30-day mortality was 10.50% in the re-audit compared to 21% and median length of hospital stay 11 days in the re-audit compared to 16 days. The lower ASA grade was significantly associated with increased likelihood of being alive, as was being female, younger age and not requiring ITU admission post-operatively. However, having a second on-call consultant was 2.231 times more likely to increase the chances of patients not dying (p = 0.031). CONCLUSION: Our audit-loop suggests that adding a second consultant to the daily on-call rota significantly reduces postoperative mortality and morbidity. Age, ASA and ITU admission are other independent factors affecting patient outcomes. We suggest this change be applied to other high volume centres across the country to improve the outcomes after emergency laparotomy. Elsevier 2017-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5633340/ /pubmed/29021897 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2017.09.013 Text en © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of IJS Publishing Group Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research
Hussain, Anwar
Mahmood, Fahad
Teng, Chui
Jafferbhoy, Sadaf
Luke, David
Tsiamis, Achilleas
Patient outcome of emergency laparotomy improved with increasing “number of surgeons on-call” in a university hospital: Audit loop
title Patient outcome of emergency laparotomy improved with increasing “number of surgeons on-call” in a university hospital: Audit loop
title_full Patient outcome of emergency laparotomy improved with increasing “number of surgeons on-call” in a university hospital: Audit loop
title_fullStr Patient outcome of emergency laparotomy improved with increasing “number of surgeons on-call” in a university hospital: Audit loop
title_full_unstemmed Patient outcome of emergency laparotomy improved with increasing “number of surgeons on-call” in a university hospital: Audit loop
title_short Patient outcome of emergency laparotomy improved with increasing “number of surgeons on-call” in a university hospital: Audit loop
title_sort patient outcome of emergency laparotomy improved with increasing “number of surgeons on-call” in a university hospital: audit loop
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5633340/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29021897
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2017.09.013
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