Wiser with Age? Increased Per-Surgeon Elderly Patient Volume is Associated with Lower Postinjury Complications

Author:

Warnack Elizabeth1,Simon Joshua2,Dang Quoc3,Catino Joseph4,Bukur Marko5

Affiliation:

1. Division of Acute Care Surgery, NYU School of Medicine, New York, New York;

2. Department of Trauma and Surgical Critical Care, Cooper University Hospital Center, Camden, New Jersey;

3. Department of Surgery, Larkin Hospital Center, Miami, Florida;

4. Department of Surgery, Division of Trauma and Surgical Critical Care, Delray Medical Center, Delray Beach, Florida;

5. Division of Acute Care Surgery, Bellevue Hospital Center, NYU School of Medicine, New York, New York

Abstract

We hypothesize that higher elderly patient volume per trauma surgeon is associated with fewer clinical complications. This is a retrospective cohort study which included elderly patients admitted to trauma surgery service within a five-year period, from 2009 to 2013, at two Level I trauma centers in Florida. Trauma surgeons were stratified into three groups depending on patient volume. Primary outcomes were postinjury complications and in-hospital mortality, and secondary outcomes were hospital length of stay (LOS), intensive care unit LOS, and ventilator days. A total of 2379 elderly patients were included in this study. Elderly patient volume per surgeon did not significantly differ based on years in practice after fellowship (P = 0.88). The higher volume group had lower incidence of complications (15% complication rate, P = 0.02), compared with the average and low-volume group (18.1 and 21%, respectively), and had significantly lower rates of acute respiratory failure (P = 0.04) and acute renal failure (P = 0.004). In-hospital mortality was not affected by volume. Hospital LOS was decreased in the higher volume group (mean LOS 7.4 days, P < 0.001). There appears to be a relationship between elderly patient volume and outcome, independent of surgeon years of experience.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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