Department of Surgery (Pincus, Wasserstein, Ravi, Byrne, Nathens, Kreder, Jenkinson), University of Toronto; Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (Pincus, Ravi, Paterson, Nathens, Kreder, Wodchis); Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation (Pincus, Byrne, Huang, Paterson, Nathens, Kreder, Jenkinson, Wodchis), University of Toronto; Department of Surgery (Wasserstein, Ravi, Byrne, Nathens, Kreder, Jenkinson), Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre; Toronto Rehabilitation Institute-University Health Network (Wodchis), Toronto, Ont.
CMAJ. 2018 Jun 11;190(23):E702-E709. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.170830.
Although a delay of 24 hours for hip fracture repair is associated with medical complications and costs, it is unknown how long patients wait for surgery for hip fracture. We describe novel methods for measuring exact urgent and emergent surgical wait times (in hours) and the factors that influence them.
Adults aged 45 years and older who underwent surgery for hip fracture (the most common urgently performed procedure) in Ontario, Canada, between 2009 and 2014 were eligible. Validated data from linked health administrative databases were used. The primary outcome was the time elapsed from hospital arrival recorded in the National Ambulatory Care Reporting System until the time of surgery recorded in the Discharge Abstract Database (in hours). The influence of patient, physician and hospital factors on wait times was investigated using 3-level, hierarchical linear regression models.
Among 42 230 patients with hip fracture, the mean (SD) wait time for surgery was 38.76 (28.84) hours, and 14 174 (33.5%) patients underwent surgery within 24 hours. Variables strongly associated with delay included time for hospital transfer (adjusted increase of 26.23 h, 95% CI 25.38 to 27.01) and time for preoperative echocardiography (adjusted increase of 18.56 h, 95% CI 17.73 to 19.38). More than half of the hospitals (37 of 72, 51.4%), compared with 4.8% of surgeons and 0.2% of anesthesiologists, showed significant differences in the risk-adjusted likelihood of delayed surgery.
Exact wait times for urgent and emergent surgery can be measured using Canada's administrative data. Only one-third of patients received surgery within the safe time frame (24 h). Wait times varied according to hospital and physician factors; however, hospital factors had a larger impact.
虽然髋部骨折修复延迟 24 小时与医疗并发症和费用相关,但尚不清楚髋部骨折患者需要等待多长时间才能进行手术。我们描述了新的方法来测量确切的紧急和紧急手术等待时间(以小时为单位)以及影响这些时间的因素。
2009 年至 2014 年间,在加拿大安大略省接受髋部骨折手术(最常见的紧急手术)的 45 岁及以上成年人符合条件。使用经过验证的链接健康管理数据库中的数据。主要结果是从国家门诊护理报告系统中记录的入院时间到出院摘要数据库中记录的手术时间(以小时为单位)的时间流逝。使用 3 级分层线性回归模型研究了患者、医生和医院因素对等待时间的影响。
在 42230 例髋部骨折患者中,手术等待时间的平均值(标准差)为 38.76(28.84)小时,14174 例(33.5%)患者在 24 小时内接受了手术。与延迟相关的强变量包括医院转移时间(调整后增加 26.23 小时,95%CI 25.38 至 27.01)和术前超声心动图时间(调整后增加 18.56 小时,95%CI 17.73 至 19.38)。与 4.8%的外科医生和 0.2%的麻醉师相比,超过一半的医院(72 家医院中的 37 家,51.4%)在手术延迟的风险调整可能性方面存在显著差异。
可以使用加拿大的行政数据来测量紧急和紧急手术的确切等待时间。只有三分之一的患者在安全时间框架(24 小时)内接受手术。等待时间因医院和医生因素而异;然而,医院因素的影响更大。