Surgical productivity did not suffer despite the states of emergency against the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan: a retrospective observational study

Author:

Nakata Yoshinori,Watanabe Yuichi,Ozaki Akihiko

Abstract

Abstract Background The purpose of this study is to compute surgical total factor productivity with Malmquist index, and to evaluate the effects of states of emergency against the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic on its productivity change. We hypothesized that the states of emergency significantly reduced surgical total factor productivity in Japan. Methods The authors collected data from all the surgical procedures performed in Teikyo University Hospital from April 1 through September 30 in 2019–21. Non-radial and non-oriented Malmquist model under the variable returns-to-scale assumptions was employed. The decision making unit (DMU) was defined as a surgical specialty department. Inputs were defined as (1) the number of medical doctors who assisted surgery, and (2) the duration of surgical operation from skin incision to closure. The output was defined as the surgical fee for each surgery. The study period was divided into fifty-one ten- (or eleven-) day periods. We added all the inputs and outputs of the surgical procedures for each DMU during these study periods, and computed its Malmquist index, efficiency change and technical change. Results Seven thousand nine hundred and thirty-one surgical procedures were analyzed. The overall productivity and efficiency progressed significantly both during states of emergency and during no states of emergency. Our subgroup analysis demonstrated that there were no surgical specialties that had significantly different productivity, efficiency or technical changes between states of emergency and no states of emergency. Conclusions We demonstrated that the surgical productivity did not suffer despite the states of emergency against the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Policy

Reference14 articles.

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2. Nikkei Asia. Japan's COVID-19 state of emergency lifted as infections decline - Nikkei Asia. https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Coronavirus/Japan-s-COVID-19-state-of-emergency-lifted-as-infections-decline. Accessed 24 Mar 2022.

3. The Japan Times. Medical care on brink of collapse in COVID-19 hot spots, panel warns | The Japan Times https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/11/25/national/science-health/japans-medical-system-overwhelmed-resurgent-pandemic/. Accessed 7 Dec 2020.

4. Cooper WW, Seiford LM, Tone K. Data envelopment analysis: a comprehensive text with models, applications, references and DEA-Solver software. 2nd ed. New York: Springer; 2007. p. 443–76.

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1. Association between surgical productivity and start time;Perioperative Care and Operating Room Management;2024-03

2. Surgical productivity recovery after the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan;Frontiers in Public Health;2024-02-13

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