Before and after COVID‐19 pandemic: impact on hepatobiliary and pancreatic surgical services in a Singapore Tertiary Hospital

Author:

Lim Joshua S. H.1ORCID,Lim Zavier Yongxuan2,Teo Zhe Hao Timothy1,Wang Bei1,Tan Yen Pin1ORCID,Junnarkar Sameer P.1,Low Jee Keem1,Huey Cheong Wei Terence1,Shelat Vishal13

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery Tan Tock Seng Hospital Singapore

2. Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine Nanyang Technological University Singapore

3. Surgical Science Training Centre Tan Tock Seng Hospital Singapore

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundReallocation of healthcare resources to prioritize the COVID‐19 pandemic‐related incremental healthcare needs resulted in longer waiting times for routine elective clinical services.AimsWe aimed to analyze the effects of the pandemic on the hepatopancreatobiliary (HPB) unit's surgical workload.MethodsThe HPB unit's surgical workload for the months of January‐June from 2019 to 2022 was extracted, retrospectively compared, and analyzed. This study was registered in ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05572866) and complies with the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guidelines.ResultsBenign elective surgeries were impacted adversely, with elective gallbladder operations decreasing by 45.2% (146 in 2019 vs 80 in 2020, p = 0.89) before slowly increasing to 120 cases in 2021 and rebounding to 179 cases in 2022 (p = 0.001).Elective oncology operations paradoxically increased, with liver resections rising by 12.9% (31 in 2019 vs 35 in 2020, p = 0.002) and maintaining 37 cases in 2021 (p = 0.0337) and 34 cases in 2022 (p = 0.69). Elective pancreatic resections increased by 171.4% (7 in 2019 vs 19 in 2020, p < 0.0001) and were maintained at 15 cases in 2021 (p = 0.013) and 18 cases in 2022 (p = 0.022).The overall emergency workload decreased from 2019 (n = 198) to 2020 (n = 129) to 2021 (n = 122) before recovering to baseline in 2022 (n = 184). The month‐on‐month volume generally showed similar trends compared to the other years except for February 2022 and May 2021.ConclusionThis audit shows that despite large‐scale disruption of the local healthcare system, essential surgeries can still proceed with careful resource planning by steadfast and vigilant clinical teams.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

Reference25 articles.

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2. Clinical guide to surgical prioritisation during the coronavirus pandemic.Royal College of Surgeons of England. [Updated 28 January 2022; cited 27 Sept 2023]. Available from URL:https://www.rcseng.ac.uk/coronavirus/surgical-prioritisation-guidance/

3. Conducting research: when is ethics approval required.National Healthcare Group. [Updated 19 July 2020; Cited 27 Sept 2023.] Available from URL:https://www.research.nhg.com.sg/wps/wcm/connect/romp/nhgromp/06+conducting+research/when+ethics+appproval+required.

4. Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE): Explanation and Elaboration

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