Robertson Faith C, Briones Richard, Mekary Rania A, Baticulon Ronnie E, Jimenez Miguel A, Leather Andrew J M, Broekman Marike L D, Park Kee B, Gormley William B, Lucena Lynne L
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Computational Neuroscience Outcomes Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
World Neurosurg X. 2019 Sep 9;6:100058. doi: 10.1016/j.wnsx.2019.100058. eCollection 2020 Apr.
The safety and effectiveness of task-sharing (TS) in neurosurgery, delegating clinical roles to non-neurosurgeons, is not well understood. This study evaluated an ongoing TS model in the Philippines, where neurosurgical workforce deficits are compounded with a large neurotrauma burden.
Medical records from emergency neurosurgical admissions to 2 hospitals were reviewed (January 2015-June 2018): Bicol Medical Center (BMC), a government hospital in which emergency neurosurgery is chiefly performed by general surgery residents (TS providers), and Mother Seton Hospital, an adjacent private hospital where neurosurgery consultants are the primary surgeons. Univariable and multivariable linear and logistic regression compared provider-associated outcomes.
Of 214 emergency neurosurgery operations, TS providers performed 95 and neurosurgeons, 119. TS patients were more often male (88.4% vs. 73.1%; = 0.007), younger (mean age, 27.6 vs. 50.5 years; < 0.001), and had experienced road traffic accidents (69.1% vs. 31.4%; < 0.001). There were no significant differences between Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores on admission. Provider type was not associated with mortality (neurosurgeons, 20.2%; TS, 17.9%; = 0.68), reoperation, or pneumonia. No significant differences were observed for GCS improvement between admission and discharge or in-hospital GCS improvement, including or excluding inpatient deaths. TS patients had shorter lengths of stay (17.3 days vs. 24.4 days; coefficient, -6.67; 95% confidence interval, -13.01 to -0.34; < 0.05) and were more likely to undergo tracheostomy (odds ratio, 3.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.30-7.40; = 0.01).
This study, one of the first to examine outcomes of neurosurgical TS, shows that a strategic TS model for emergency neurosurgery produces comparable outcomes to the local neurosurgeons.
任务分担(TS)即在神经外科手术中将临床工作委托给非神经外科医生,其安全性和有效性尚未得到充分了解。本研究评估了菲律宾正在实施的一种TS模式,该国神经外科劳动力短缺,且神经创伤负担沉重。
回顾了两家医院(2015年1月至2018年6月)急诊神经外科住院患者的病历:比科尔医疗中心(BMC),一家公立医院,急诊神经外科手术主要由普通外科住院医师(TS提供者)进行;以及相邻的私立医院西顿圣母医院,神经外科顾问是主要外科医生。单变量和多变量线性及逻辑回归比较了与提供者相关的结果。
在214例急诊神经外科手术中,TS提供者进行了95例,神经外科医生进行了119例。TS患者男性更多(88.4%对73.1%;P = 0.007),更年轻(平均年龄27.6岁对50.5岁;P < 0.001),且经历道路交通事故的比例更高(69.1%对31.4%;P < 0.001)。入院时格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)评分无显著差异。提供者类型与死亡率(神经外科医生,20.2%;TS,17.9%;P = 0.68)、再次手术或肺炎无关。入院和出院时GCS改善情况或住院期间GCS改善情况(包括或排除住院死亡患者)均未观察到显著差异。TS患者住院时间更短(17.3天对24.4天;系数,-6.67;95%置信区间,-13.01至-0.34;P < 0.05),且更有可能接受气管切开术(比值比,3.1;95%置信区间,1.30 - 7.40;P = 0.01)。
本研究是最早研究神经外科TS结果的研究之一,表明急诊神经外科手术的一种战略TS模式产生的结果与当地神经外科医生相当。