Weekend admission and mortality for gastrointestinal disorders across England and Wales
Autor: | Kym Thorne, J. L. Brown, Duncan Napier, Ashley Akbari, Stephen E. Roberts, Ronan A Lyons, John Williams, T. H. Brown |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Pediatrics Time Factors Gastrointestinal Diseases education 03 medical and health sciences Liver disease 0302 clinical medicine medicine Humans In patient Hospital Mortality 030212 general & internal medicine Gastrointestinal cancer Aged Gastrointestinal Neoplasms Wales business.industry Liver Diseases Original Articles Middle Aged medicine.disease 3. Good health Hospitalization England Mortality data Emergency medicine Female Original Article 030211 gastroenterology & hepatology Surgery Emergencies business human activities Gi cancer Record linkage |
Zdroj: | The British Journal of Surgery |
Popis: | Background Little has been reported on mortality following admissions at weekends for many gastrointestinal (GI) disorders. The aim was to establish whether GI disorders are susceptible to increased mortality following unscheduled admission on weekends compared with weekdays. Methods Record linkage was undertaken of national administrative inpatient and mortality data for people in England and Wales who were hospitalized as an emergency for one of 19 major GI disorders. Results The study included 2 254 701 people in England and 155 464 in Wales. For 11 general surgical and medical GI disorders there were little, or no, significant weekend effects on mortality at 30 days in either country. There were large consistent weekend effects in both countries for severe liver disease (England: 26·2 (95 per cent c.i. 21·1 to 31·6) per cent; Wales: 32·0 (12·4 to 55·1 per cent) and GI cancer (England: 21·8 (19·1 to 24·5) per cent; Wales: 25·0 (15·0 to 35·9) per cent), which were lower in patients managed by surgeons. Admission rates were lower at weekends than on weekdays, most strongly for severe liver disease (by 43·3 per cent in England and 51·4 per cent in Wales) and GI cancer (by 44·6 and 52·8 per cent respectively). Both mortality and the weekend mortality effect for GI cancer were lower for patients managed by surgeons. Discussion There is little, or no, evidence of a weekend mortality effect for most major general surgical or medical GI disorders, but large weekend effects for GI cancer and severe liver disease. Lower admission rates at weekends indicate more severe cases. The findings for severe liver disease may suggest a lack of specialist hepatological resources. For cancers, reduced availability of end‐of‐life care in the community at weekends may be the cause. Worst for gastrointestinal cancer and liver disease |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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