Fu Rui, Li Qing, Calzavara Andrew, Sauro Khara, Eskander Antoine
Departments of Community Health Sciences, Surgery & Oncology, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
ICES, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Front Surg. 2025 Jul 28;12:1591265. doi: 10.3389/fsurg.2025.1591265. eCollection 2025.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, non-urgent surgeries were delayed in order to increase the capacity to care for patients with COVID-19. To shed light on the effect of pandemic-related surgical ramp down on the quality of surgical care, this study compared Ontario with Alberta on (1) changes in the proportion of completion and wait time of surgeries with decision-to-treat in a pre-pandemic period compared to those with decision-to-treat in each of the four COVID-19 waves and (2) shifts in healthcare utilization and safety of surgical patients for the same time periods.
A retrospective population-based cohort study was conducted in Ontario on scheduled non-urgent surgeries among adults with decision-to-treat (index dates) between January 1, 2018 and December 31, 2021. Logistic regression was used to examine surgery completion (observed up to December 31, 2021) on the index date period (each COVID-19 wave vs. pre-pandemic). For completed surgeries, median regression was used to assess wait time on the index date period. Descriptive statistics were provided on healthcare utilization and safety indicators among the cohort. Results from regression models and descriptive statistics were then compared with published data from Alberta.
There were 2,073,688 non-urgent surgeries scheduled for 1,560,265 unique adults in Ontario. Surgeries with an index date in each COVID-19 wave were associated with lower odds of completion compared to the pre-pandemic period, which is in contrast to Alberta where the odds of having surgery completed was not lower during the pandemic than pre-pandemic. Among completed surgeries (91.7%) in Ontario, the median wait time was shorter for surgeries with an index date in waves 2 and 4 than in the pre-pandemic period, while in Alberta the median wait time was shorter for surgeries with index dates in waves 2-4 than pre-pandemic. During the pandemic, Alberta reported a decrease in median intensive care unit (ICU) hours and hospital length of stay for patients relative to pre-pandemic, while Ontario reported an increase in median ICU hours of these patients.
These findings highlight interprovincial differences in surgical care which might be related to COVID-19 policies in each province, healthcare system capacity and patient demographics.
在新冠疫情期间,非紧急手术被推迟,以便增加护理新冠患者的能力。为了阐明与疫情相关的手术量下降对手术护理质量的影响,本研究将安大略省与艾伯塔省在以下方面进行了比较:(1)与大流行前相比,在新冠疫情四个阶段中每个阶段的手术完成比例和从决定治疗到手术的等待时间的变化;(2)同一时期手术患者的医疗服务利用情况和安全性的变化。
在安大略省对2018年1月1日至2021年12月31日期间有决定治疗(索引日期)的成年患者进行的非紧急计划手术开展了一项基于人群的回顾性队列研究。采用逻辑回归分析在索引日期期间(每个新冠疫情阶段与大流行前相比)的手术完成情况(观察至2021年12月31日)。对于已完成的手术,采用中位数回归分析评估索引日期期间的等待时间。提供了该队列中医疗服务利用情况和安全指标的描述性统计数据。然后将回归模型和描述性统计结果与艾伯塔省公布的数据进行比较。
安大略省为1,560,265名成年患者安排了2,073,688例非紧急手术。与大流行前相比,在每个新冠疫情阶段有索引日期的手术完成几率较低,这与艾伯塔省不同,在艾伯塔省,大流行期间手术完成的几率并不低于大流行前。在安大略省已完成的手术(91.7%)中,第2阶段和第4阶段有索引日期的手术的中位等待时间比大流行前短,而在艾伯塔省,第2至4阶段有索引日期的手术的中位等待时间比大流行前短。在大流行期间,艾伯塔省报告患者的重症监护病房(ICU)中位时长和住院时间相对于大流行前有所减少,而安大略省报告这些患者的ICU中位时长有所增加。
这些发现凸显了各省在手术护理方面的差异,这可能与每个省的新冠政策、医疗系统能力和患者人口统计学特征有关。