Interhospital provision of emergency vascular services for a large population: early outcomes and clinical results

Author:

Baird R N1,Baker A R2,Hine C2,Lamont P M1,Lear P A3,Loveday E3,Mitchell D M3,Morse M3,Munro E N2,Murphy K P3,Rees M R1,Smith F C T1,Thornton M J2

Affiliation:

1. Bristol Royal Infirmary, Bristol, UK

2. Frenchay Hospital, Bristol, UK

3. Southmead Hospital, Bristol, UK

Abstract

Abstract Background In 1999 an emergency vascular service for Bristol and Avon (including Weston-Super-Mare) (population approximately 1 million) was initiated. Methods Collaboration between Bristol Royal Infirmary, Frenchay and Southmead Hospitals provides week-on–week-off vascular cover for patients requiring urgent and emergency interventions within 24 h. The rota accommodates National Confidential Enquiry into Perioperative Deaths and Vascular Surgical Society of Great Britain and Ireland recommendations, governance issues, and enhances emergency vascular care for Avon residents. Prospectively collected data for the first year (May 1999 to April 2000) are reviewed. Results There were 289 emergency admissions. (In-hospital referrals were not transferred but contributed up to 40 per cent of the extra emergency workload per unit.) Referrals were also accepted from seven Trusts outside the designated catchment area. Caseload included 86 patients with a ruptured or acutely symptomatic aortic aneurysm, of whom 69 underwent operation (30 per cent mortality rate); 17 patients were not operated on. Some 136 patients had critical leg ischaemia (43 acute, 93 chronic); angiography or duplex ultrasonography was performed in 105 cases (77 per cent); 39 patients (29 per cent) had undergone previous intervention for peripheral vascular disease; the mortality rate was 18 (13 per cent) of 136; 18 (13 per cent) of 136 patients required an amputation. Other cases included: upper limb ischaemia, 20 (7 per cent); paediatric emergency, seven (2 per cent); symptomatic carotid disease, five (2 per cent; four endarterectomies with no death or stroke). Some 5 per cent of referrals were inappropriate (venous ulcer, spinal stenosis, etc.). No outcomes were compromised by interhospital transfers. Vascular surgeons operated on nine high-risk patients away from their ‘base’ hospital. A consultant was the principal or assistant operator in more than 95 per cent of operations but, despite trainee rota adjustments, a designated vascular trainee was present in only about 40 per cent of cases. Conclusion Interhospital provision of emergency vascular services for a large population is feasible, does not compromise quality of care, and regulates emergency workload. Further attention to training issues is indicated.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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