Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery John Hunter Hospital Newcastle New South Wales Australia
2. School of Medicine and Public Health University of Newcastle Newcastle New South Wales Australia
3. Hunter Medical Research Institute Newcastle New South Wales Australia
4. Medical School University of Western Australia Crawley Western Australia Australia
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundEmergency laparotomy (EL) is performed on about 15 500 patients in Australia each year. Aside from mortality there is significant concern about the possibility that previously independent patients discharged after EL will become reliant on long‐term dependent care. This study aimed to establish the proportion of patients not returning to their pre‐admission residence, a proxy for dependent care, following EL.MethodsData were collected on all adult patients who underwent EL across four Australian hospitals over 2 years. A total of 113 data points were collected including pre‐hospital residence, discharge destination, mortality and place of residence at 90 and 365 days.ResultsA total of 782 patients underwent EL, the mean age was 64 years. Pre‐admission, 95.5% of patients were living in their own home. Inpatient mortality was 7.0% and at discharge 72.4% of patients returned directly back to their pre‐hospital residence. At 90 days, mortality was 10.5%, and 87% of patients had returned to their pre‐hospital residence, including all patients under 70 years of age. By 365 days, overall mortality was 16.8%, and only 1.5% of patients (all aged >70 years) had not returned to their pre‐hospital residence.ConclusionPatients who survive 90 and 365 days following EL nearly all return to their pre‐hospital residence, with only a very small proportion of previously independent patients entering dependent care. This should help inform shared decision‐making regarding emergency laparotomy in the acute setting.