Neurosurgical Operative Cancellations in Canada: A Multicentre Retrospective Cohort Study.

IF 2.9 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Mark A MacLean, Amit R Persad, Nicole R Coote, Dilakshan Srikanthan, Michael A Rizzuto, Jonathan Chainey, Taylor Duda, Matthew E Eagles, Shannon Hart, Jessica Jung, Michelle M Kameda-Smith, Melissa Lannon, Eric Toyota, Nicolas Sader, Sean Christie
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Abstract

Introduction: Operative cancellations adversely affect patient health and impose resource strain on the healthcare system. Here, our objective was to describe neurosurgical cancellations at five Canadian academic institutions.

Methods: The Canadian Neurosurgery Research Collaborative performed a retrospective cohort study capturing neurosurgical procedure cancellation data at five Canadian academic centres, during the period between January 1, 2014 and December 31, 2018. Demographics, procedure type, reason for cancellation, admission status and case acuity were collected. Cancellation rates were compared on the basis of demographic data, procedural data and between centres.

Results: Overall, 7,734 cancellations were captured across five sites. Mean age of the aggregate cohort was 57.1 ± 17.2 years. The overall procedure cancellation rate was 18.2%. The five-year neurosurgical operative cancellation rate differed between Centre 1 and 2 (Centre 1: 25.9%; Centre 2: 13.0%, p = 0.008). Female patients less frequently experienced procedural cancellation. Elective, outpatient and spine procedures were more often cancelled. Reasons for cancellation included surgeon-related factors (28.2%), cancellation for a higher acuity case (23.9%), patient condition (17.2%), other factors (17.0%), resource availability (7.0%), operating room running late (6.4%) and anaesthesia-related (0.3%). When clustered, the reason for cancellation was patient-related in 17.2%, staffing-related in 28.5% and operational or resource-related in 54.3% of cases.

Conclusions: Neurosurgical operative cancellations were common and most often related to operational or resource-related factors. Elective, outpatient and spine procedures were more often cancelled. These findings highlight areas for optimizing efficiency and targeted quality improvement initiatives.

加拿大神经外科手术取消率:多中心回顾性队列研究。
导言:手术取消会对患者健康造成不利影响,并给医疗系统带来资源压力。在此,我们的目标是描述加拿大五家学术机构的神经外科手术取消情况:加拿大神经外科研究合作组织开展了一项回顾性队列研究,收集了 2014 年 1 月 1 日至 2018 年 12 月 31 日期间加拿大五家学术中心的神经外科手术取消数据。研究收集了人口统计学、手术类型、取消原因、入院状态和病例敏锐度。根据人口统计学数据、手术数据和中心之间的取消率进行了比较:五个医疗中心共记录了 7734 例取消手术。总体群组的平均年龄为 57.1 ± 17.2 岁。总手术取消率为 18.2%。中心1和中心2的五年神经外科手术取消率不同(中心1:25.9%;中心2:13.0%,p = 0.008)。女性患者的手术取消率较低。择期手术、门诊手术和脊柱手术更常被取消。取消手术的原因包括与外科医生有关的因素(28.2%)、因病情较重而取消手术(23.9%)、患者状况(17.2%)、其他因素(17.0%)、资源可用性(7.0%)、手术室延迟(6.4%)和与麻醉有关(0.3%)。如果进行分组,取消手术的原因与患者有关的占17.2%,与人员有关的占28.5%,与操作或资源有关的占54.3%:结论:神经外科手术取消很常见,且多与操作或资源相关因素有关。选择性手术、门诊手术和脊柱手术更常被取消。这些发现突出了优化效率和有针对性的质量改进措施的领域。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
3.30%
发文量
330
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences is the official publication of the four member societies of the Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation -- Canadian Neurological Society (CNS), Canadian Association of Child Neurology (CACN), Canadian Neurosurgical Society (CNSS), Canadian Society of Clinical Neurophysiologists (CSCN). The Journal is a widely circulated internationally recognized medical journal that publishes peer-reviewed articles. The Journal is published in January, March, May, July, September, and November in an online only format. The first Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences (the Journal) was published in 1974 in Winnipeg. In 1981, the Journal became the official publication of the member societies of the CNSF.
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