Prevalence of surgery cancelation and challenges in restarting elective surgery in the pandemic: A cross-sectional study
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Date
2024-01-10
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Abstract
Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic caused primary disruption of health services, especially to elective surgery. As the pandemic goes in waves of high and low infection rates in a country, restarting elective surgery must be dynamic while balancing patients’ needs, staff safety and the hospital capacity. We aim to report the prevalence of elective surgery and minimally invasive procedures cancelation due to positive Covid-19 screening and describe steps in restarting elective cases after the third wave of Covid-19 infection.
Methods: This study was a descriptive cross-sectional study in Indonesia’s tertiary referral and teaching hospital from January to September 2021. Subjects were patients scheduled for elective surgery or minimally invasive procedures from our outpatient clinic. Subjects were screened for SARS-CoV-2 using real-time polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) 24-48 hours before scheduled surgery or intervention. Data was taken from the hospital information system and the central operating theatre online surgical list. Statistical analysis is presented in percentage.
Results: There were 5286 subjects identified for the study, and 3088 were included with an available PCR result from the outpatient department. The average elective cancelation rate was 7.4%, and the highest cancelation was on August 2021, with 14.7%. All subjects with positive results were asymptomatic, with more than 90% cycle time rRT-PCR above 30.
Conclusion: Elective surgery cancelation can reflect a trend in community infection, and monitoring its values is crucial for saving elective surgery plans during a pandemic.
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Covid-19, Elective surgery, Operating room