The impact of elective surgery postponement during COVID-19 on emergency bellwether procedures in a large tertiary centre in Singapore

Author:

Chan Sze Ling12ORCID,Zhang Alwin Yaoxian3,Lam Sean Shao Wei12,Rao Vijaya45,Kanagalingam Devendra36,Tan Hiang Khoon347,Chow Pierce Kah Hoe38,Mathur Sachin39

Affiliation:

1. Health Services Research Centre, SingHealth , 20 College Road, Academia, Level 6, Singapore 169856, Singapore

2. Health Services & Systems Research, Duke–NUS Medical School , 8 College Road, Singapore 169857, Singapore

3. Division of Surgery & Surgical Oncology, National Cancer Centre Singapore and Singapore General Hospital , 30 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore 168583, Singapore

4. SingHealth Duke–NUS Global Health Institute , 8 College Road, Singapore 169857, Singapore

5. International Collaboration Office, SingHealth , 168 Jalan Bukit Merah, #11-01 Surbana One, Singapore 150168, Singapore

6. Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, Singapore General Hospital , 20 College Road, Academia, Level 5, Singapore 169856, Singapore

7. Duke Global Health Institute , 310 Trent Drive, Durham, NC 27710, USA

8. Surgery Academic Clinical Program, Duke-NUS Medical School , 8 College Road, Singapore 169857, Singapore

9. Department of General Surgery, Singapore General Hospital , 20 College Road, Academia, Level 5, Singapore 169856, Singapore

Abstract

Abstract The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic drove many healthcare systems worldwide to postpone elective surgery to increase healthcare capacity, manpower, and reduce infection risk to staff. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of an elective surgery postponement policy in response to the COVID-19 pandemic on surgical volumes and patient outcomes for three emergency bellwether procedures. A retrospective cohort study of patients who underwent any of the three emergency procedures [Caesarean section (CS), emergency laparotomy (EL), and open fracture (OF) fixation] between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2021 was conducted using clinical and surgical data from electronic medical records. The volumes and outcomes of each surgery were compared across four time periods: pre-COVID (January 2018–January 2020), elective postponement (February–May 2020), recovery (June–November 2020), and postrecovery (December 2020–December 2021) using Kruskal–Wallis test and segmented negative binomial regression. There was a total of 3886, 1396, and 299 EL, CS, and OF, respectively. There was no change in weekly volumes of CS and OF fixations across the four time periods. However, the volume of EL increased by 47% [95% confidence interval: 26–71%, P = 9.13 × 10–7) and 52% (95% confidence interval: 25–85%, P = 3.80 × 10–5) in the recovery and postrecovery period, respectively. Outcomes did not worsen throughout the four time periods for all three procedures and some actually improved for EL from elective postponement onwards. Elective surgery postponement in the early COVID-19 pandemic did not affect volumes of emergency CS and OF fixations but led to an increase in volume for EL after the postponement without any worsening of outcomes.

Funder

Singapore General Hospital

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference37 articles.

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1. Hernia repair as a tracer for elective surgical care;The Lancet Global Health;2024-07

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