Impact of an acute care surgery service on timeliness of care and surgeon satisfaction at a Canadian academic hospital: a retrospective study
Autor: | Gary Groot, Allison M Hunter, Kerollos N Wanis, Michael B Harington |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Response rate (survey)
Service (business) Program evaluation medicine.medical_specialty business.industry Acute care surgery Retrospective cohort study medicine.disease Wait time Bowel obstruction Emergency medicine Acute appendicitis Emergency Medicine medicine Surgeon satisfaction Surgery business General surgery Research Article |
Zdroj: | World Journal of Emergency Surgery : WJES |
ISSN: | 1749-7922 |
Popis: | Introduction In January 2012 an acute care surgery (ACS) model was introduced at St. Paul’s Hospital, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The goal of implementing an ACS service was to improve the delivery of care for emergent, non-trauma surgical patients. We examined whether the ACS model improved wait time to surgery, decreased the proportion of surgeries performed after hours, and shortened post-surgical length of stay. We also assessed whether the surgeons working in an ACS system had higher on-call satisfaction than surgeons working in a non- ACS system. Methods A retrospective pre-post analysis was performed using data from the Discharge Abstract Database and the Organizing Medical Networked Information database. Surgeon satisfaction was evaluated using a questionnaire that was mailed to all general surgeons in Saskatoon. Results An ACS service significantly reduced wait time to surgery for patients with all acute general surgery diagnoses from 221 minutes to 192 minutes (ρ = 0.015; CI = 5.8-52.2). Post-surgery length of stay for patients operated on for acute appendicitis, or acute cholecystitis was not reduced. On average, patients with bowel obstruction had increased length of stay following ACS service implementation. Most surgeries in our study were performed between 16:00 hours and 08:00 hours but the introduction of an ACS significantly reduced the number of afterhours surgeries (60.0% vs. 72.6%) (ρ |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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