DMD Candidate, Dental School, University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine, Philadelphia, PA.
DMD Candidate, Dental School, University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine, Philadelphia, PA.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2021 Dec;79(12):2482-2486. doi: 10.1016/j.joms.2021.06.033.
Attempts to mitigate the coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID) have disrupted the delivery of non-pandemic care. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of the COVID pandemic on surgical volume and variety at an academic oral and maxillofacial surgery program.
A retrospective cohort study was conducted using the surgical logs of the University of Pennsylvania, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery from January 2012 through January 2021. Each record identified patient demographics and case classifications. The study predictor was timing of care, which was divided into pre-pandemic, peak pandemic, or post-peak pandemic. The primary study outcomes were the monthly procedure count and the procedure categories. The secondary dependent variables were patient age and race. Multivariate and univariate analyses of variance were used to determine whether pandemic effects existed within outcome groups.
The final sample included 64,709 surgical procedures. Before, during, and after the pandemic peak, there were means of 691.0, 209.0, and 789.4 procedures per time period, respectively (P < .01). There was significantly more infection (baseline 2.2%, peak 6.0%, post-peak 2.0%, P < .01) and trauma (baseline 5.3%, peak 26.7%, post-peak 3.9%, P < .01) cases during the pandemic peak. The mean percentage of pediatric patients increased during the peak and post-peak periods (baseline 2.4%, peak 12.9%, post-peak 10.2%, P < .01). No differences were observed among the mean percentage of White (P = .12), Black (P = .21), and Hispanic (P = .25) patients treated.
Along with a predictable decline in surgical numbers, a greater proportion of infection and trauma procedures were performed at the pandemic's peak. Despite these changes, surgery volume normalized and case variety returned to pre-pandemic levels in the post-peak period. Our study suggests that the addition of COVID restrictions did not change the case volume or variety in the months' after the initial crisis.
为减轻 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID)的影响,各种措施干扰了非大流行时期医疗的开展。本研究旨在评估 COVID 大流行对宾夕法尼亚大学口腔颌面外科项目的手术数量和种类的影响。
本研究采用回顾性队列研究,使用宾夕法尼亚大学口腔颌面外科的手术记录,时间范围为 2012 年 1 月至 2021 年 1 月。每个记录均确定了患者的人口统计学和病例分类。研究的预测因素是治疗时间,分为大流行前、大流行高峰期和大流行高峰期后。主要研究结果是每月的手术次数和手术种类。次要的因变量是患者的年龄和种族。采用多变量和单变量方差分析来确定在各结果组中是否存在大流行的影响。
最终的样本包括 64709 例手术。在大流行高峰期之前、高峰期和高峰期后,每月手术次数分别为 691.0 次、209.0 次和 789.4 次(P<.01)。在高峰期,感染(基线 2.2%,高峰期 6.0%,高峰期后 2.0%,P<.01)和创伤(基线 5.3%,高峰期 26.7%,高峰期后 3.9%,P<.01)病例明显增多。高峰期和高峰期后,儿科患者的比例增加(基线 2.4%,高峰期 12.9%,高峰期后 10.2%,P<.01)。治疗的白人(P=0.12)、黑人(P=0.21)和西班牙裔(P=0.25)患者的比例无差异。
随着手术数量的可预测下降,高峰期进行了更多的感染和创伤手术。尽管发生了这些变化,但在高峰期后,手术量恢复正常,病例种类恢复到大流行前水平。本研究表明,在最初的危机过后的几个月里,增加 COVID 限制并没有改变病例量或种类。