Dreiher Jacob, Einav Sharon, Codish Shlomi, Frenkel Amit
Hospital Administration, Soroka University Medical Center, and The Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel.
General Intensive Care Unit, Shaare Zedek Medical Center, and Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Hebrew University-Hadassah Faculty of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
PLoS One. 2025 Apr 16;20(4):e0313301. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0313301. eCollection 2025.
Environmental events, including military conflicts, may dramatically affect a hospital's ability to provide routine treatments while maintaining reasonable waiting times.
To examine the impact of a military conflict ("Protective Edge", PE) on the volume of activity and waiting times for outpatient clinics in a tertiary medical center.
Outpatient visits during PE (July-August 2014) were compared to outpatient visits during July-August 2013 (pre-conflict period) and 2015 (post-conflict period) with regards to the daily number of visits and waiting times. Clinics with at least 5,000 annual visits were included. Quantile regression adjusted for confounders was used for the multivariable models, in a stratified analysis by specialty.
There were 87,495 outpatient visits during PE and 197,029 visits during the pre- and post-conflict periods. An 11% decrease in the daily number of visits was noted (ranging from 6% decrease in oncology and cardiology to 19-20% decrease in psychiatry and pediatrics). During PE, statistically significant longer waiting times were found for surgery (+1.0 day) and imaging (+1.1 days), while a 2.4 days decrease was noted in pediatrics, controlled for age, sex, ethnicity and the daily number of visits. Median waiting times were unchanged for cardiology, medicine, psychiatry and cardiology.
In the midst of a continuing military conflict, there was a notable increase in outpatient visit waiting times in some disciplines, but not all, despite a reduction in the overall volume of visits. Investigating whether similar impacts on patient care occur during other military conflicts or pandemics necessitates further research.
包括军事冲突在内的环境事件可能会极大地影响医院在保持合理等待时间的同时提供常规治疗的能力。
研究军事冲突(“护刃行动”,PE)对一家三级医疗中心门诊活动量和等待时间的影响。
将PE期间(2014年7月至8月)的门诊就诊情况与2013年7月至8月(冲突前时期)和2015年(冲突后时期)的门诊就诊情况在每日就诊次数和等待时间方面进行比较。纳入年就诊量至少为5000次的科室。多变量模型采用经混杂因素调整的分位数回归,并按专业进行分层分析。
PE期间有87495次门诊就诊,冲突前和冲突后时期有197029次就诊。注意到每日就诊次数下降了11%(从肿瘤学和心脏病学的6%下降到精神病学和儿科学的19 - 20%)。在PE期间,发现外科手术(增加1.0天)和影像学检查(增加1.1天)的等待时间在统计学上显著延长,而儿科学在控制了年龄、性别、种族和每日就诊次数后等待时间减少了2.4天。心脏病学、内科、精神病学和心脏病学的中位等待时间没有变化。
在持续的军事冲突中,尽管就诊总量有所减少,但部分学科而非所有学科的门诊就诊等待时间显著增加。调查在其他军事冲突或大流行期间是否对患者护理产生类似影响需要进一步研究。