The length of hospital stay following bariatric surgery in Australia: the impact of patient, procedure, system and surgeon

Author:

Chadwick Chiara12ORCID,Burton Paul R.12,Brown Dianne3,Holland Jennifer F.3,Campbell Angus3,Cottrell Jenifer3,Reilly Jennifer14ORCID,MacCormick Andrew D.35,Caterson Ian67,Brown Wendy A.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Central Clinical School Alfred Health, Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. Oesophago‐Gastric and Bariatric Unit Alfred Health Melbourne Victoria Australia

3. School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Bariatric Surgery Registry Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. Department of Anaesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine Alfred Health Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. Department of Surgery University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

6. Boden Initiative, Charles Perkins Centre University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

7. Department of Endocrinology Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe length of a patient's stay (LOS) in a hospital is one metric used to compare the quality of care, as a longer LOS may flag higher complication rates or less efficient processes. A meaningful comparison of LOS can only occur if the expected average length of stay (ALOS) is defined first. This study aimed to define the expected ALOS of primary and conversion bariatric surgery in Australia and to quantify the effect of patient, procedure, system, and surgeon factors on ALOS.MethodsThis was a retrospective observational study of prospectively maintained data from the Bariatric Surgery Registry of 63 604 bariatric procedures performed in Australia. The primary outcome measure was the expected ALOS for primary and conversion bariatric procedures. The secondary outcome measures quantified the change in ALOS for bariatric surgery resulting from patient, procedure, hospital, and surgeon factors.ResultsUncomplicated primary bariatric surgery had an ALOS (SD) of 2.30 (1.31) days, whereas conversion procedures had an ALOS (SD) of 2.71 (2.75) days yielding a mean difference (SEM) in ALOS of 0.41 (0.05) days, P < 0.001. The occurrence of any defined adverse event extended the ALOS of primary and conversion procedures by 1.14 days (CI 95% 1.04–1.25), P < 0.001 and 2.33 days (CI 95% 1.54–3.11), P < 0.001, respectively. Older age, diabetes, rural home address, surgeon operating volume and hospital case volume increased the ALOS following bariatric surgery.ConclusionsOur findings have defined Australia's expected ALOS following bariatric surgery. Increased patient age, diabetes, rural living, procedural complications and surgeon and hospital case volume exerted a small but significant increase in ALOS.Study typeRetrospective observational study of prospectively collected data.

Funder

Johnson and Johnson

Medtronic

National Health and Medical Research Council

Pfizer

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

Reference27 articles.

1. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2017.Weight loss surgery in Australia 2014–15: Australian hospital statistics. Cat. no. HSE 186. Canberra: AIHW.

2. BackmanB BrownD CottrellJ et al.The Bariatric Surgery Registry Annual Report 2015. Monash University Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine August.2015

3. BackmanB BrownD CottrellJ et al.The Bariatric Surgery Registry Annual Report 2019. Monash University Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine August.2019.

4. Metabolic and bariatric surgery fact sheet: ASMBS[American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery website] August 6.2021. [Cited 11 Nov 2022.] Available from URL:https://asmbs.org/resources/metabolic-and-bariatric-surgery.

5. Clinical quality registries: urgent reform is required to enable best practice and best care

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