新西兰的上消化道和肝胆胰外科手术:在一个手术量较少的国家平衡手术量与手术结果之间的关系。

Jonathan Koea, Phillip Chao, S. Srinivasa, Jason Gurney
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言新西兰只有 550 万人口,这意味着就许多外科手术而言,该国属于 "低量中心"。然而,新西兰的医疗系统非常发达,需要提供复杂的外科手术,与国际上同类国家相比,新西兰的医疗水平处于领先地位。本调查旨在审查新西兰复杂切除术和姑息性上消化道(UGI)外科手术的地区差异和手术量。方法从国家最低数据集中获取了2000年1月1日至2019年12月31日期间在新西兰一家医院接受复杂切除性上消化道手术(食管切除术、胃切除术、胰腺切除术和肝切除术)和姑息性上消化道手术(食管支架植入术、肠造口术、胆肠吻合术和肝脏消融术)患者的相关数据。结果新西兰是泌尿生殖系统手术量较少的中心(每年进行229例肝切除术、250例胃切除术、126例胰切除术和74例食管切除术)。80%以上的肝切除/消融术、胃切除术、食管切除术和胰腺切除术患者都在六个国家癌症中心(奥克兰、怀卡托、中环、首都海岸、坎特伯雷或南部)之一接受治疗。有证据表明,这些手术在小中心的频率在下降,而在大中心的频率在上升,这表明正在出现一些区域化现象。姑息疗法的应用更为广泛。与非毛利人相比,原住民毛利人在国家指定的癌症中心接受治疗的可能性较低。结论新西兰和类似规模的国家面临的挑战是开发和实施一个系统,优化频繁实施复杂手术所带来的技能和途径,同时保持系统的弹性,确保所有患者都能公平地获得治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Upper gastrointestinal and hepatopancreaticobiliary surgery in New Zealand: Balancing the volume-outcome relationship with accessibility in a surgically low volume country.
INTRODUCTION New Zealand has a population of only 5.5 million meaning that for many surgical procedures the country qualifies as a "low-volume center." However, the health system is well developed and required to provide complex surgical procedures that benchmark internationally against comparable countries. This investigation was undertaken to review regional variation and volumes of complex resection and palliative upper gastrointestinal (UGI) surgical procedures within New Zealand. METHODS Data pertaining to patients undergoing complex resectional UGI procedures (esophagectomy, gastrectomy, pancreatectomy, and hepatectomies) and palliative UGI procedures (esophageal stenting, enteroenterostomy, biliary enteric anastomosis, and liver ablation) in a New Zealand hospital between January 1, 2000 and December 31, 2019 were obtained from the National Minimum Dataset. RESULTS New Zealand is a low-volume center for UGI surgery (229 hepatectomies, 250 gastrectomies, 126 pancreatectomies, and 74 esophagectomies annually). Over 80% of patients undergoing hepatic resection/ablation, gastrectomy, esophagectomy, and pancreatectomy are treated in one of the six national cancer centers (Auckland, Waikato, Mid-Central, Capital Coast, Canterbury, or Southern). There is evidence of the decreasing frequency of these procedures in small centers with increasing frequency in large centers suggesting that some regionalization is occurring. Palliative procedures were more widely performed. Indigenous Māori were less likely to be treated in a nationally designated cancer center than non-Māori. CONCLUSIONS The challenge for New Zealand and similarly sized countries is to develop and implement a system that optimizes the skills and pathways that come from a frequent performance of complex surgery while maintaining system resilience and ensuring equitable access for all patients.
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