Optimizing theatre utilization for abscess drainage: going beyond priority categories

Author:

Yang Phillip F.123ORCID,Builth‐Snoad Lily1,Ng Kheng‐Seong1245,Gu Eva1,Errington Belinda1,McBride Kate E.4,Lee Peter J.124

Affiliation:

1. Department of Colorectal Surgery Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Surgical Outcomes Research Centre (SOuRCe), Faculty of Medicine and Health University of Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. South West Sydney Clinical Campus UNSW Sydney New South Wales Australia

4. Institute of Academic Surgery Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Sydney New South Wales Australia

5. Sydney Medical School University of Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDay‐only emergency surgery for abscess drainage is poorly implemented in Australia. This study assessed the feasibility, outcomes, cost, and impact of an acute day‐only surgery (ADOS) program.MethodA retrospective pre‐post implementation study of patients requiring abscess drainage in theatre was performed. Following implementation of an ADOS program for abscess management, eligible patients were discharged from the emergency department and prioritized first on the following day's emergency list. Outcomes from the first 12 months of the ADOS era were compared with those of the preceding 6 months (pre‐ADOS). Primary outcome was length of hospital stay (LOS). Secondary outcomes included 30‐day complications, admission costs, and impact on overall emergency theatre workflow (measured by emergency appendicectomy metrics).ResultsOverall, 266 patients during the ADOS era (including 95 eligible for the ADOS pathway) were compared with 115 patients during the pre‐ADOS era. Baseline characteristics were comparable. Median LOS was shorter during the ADOS era (21.9 h (IQR 11.8–43.3) vs. 30.1 h (IQR 24.7–48.8), P < 0.001). Median LOS was 10.2 h (IQR 8.9–13.1) for patients on the ADOS pathway. There were no significant differences in 30‐day complications (9.3% vs. 9.5%), emergency department re‐presentations (7.4% vs. 5.1%), or abscess recurrence (5.6% vs. 5.7%). Average cost per patient was lower during the ADOS era ($4155 vs. $4916, p = 0.005). ADOS did not appear to materially impact other emergency procedures.ConclusionADOS for abscess drainage is feasible, safe, and produces cost savings, while being implemented without significant additional resources.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference16 articles.

1. Emergency ambulatory surgery: Can it work?

2. NSW Parliament.Impact of ambulance ramping and access block on the operation of hospital emergency departments in New South Wales. Legislative Council. Portfolio Committee No. 2 – Health. Report no. 60.2022; [Cited 3 Nov 2023.] Available from URL:https://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/lcdocs/inquiries/2892/Report%20No.60%20‐%20Portfolio%20Committee%20No.%202%20‐%20Health%20‐%20Ambulance.pdf

3. Provision of a day case abscess service;Lofus IM;Ann. R. Coll. Surg. Engl.,1997

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