Repercussions of COVID-19-related national lockdown on Emergency Surgery Department: a longitudinal cohort monocentric study

MINERVA SURGERY(2022)

引用 3|浏览13
暂无评分
摘要
BACKGROUND: COVID-19 lockdown restrictions in conjunction with the pervasive hospital fear endured by the vast majority of the population played a fundamental role in discouraging access to emergency departments (EDs). We aimed at investigating whether and how the COVID-19 outbreak limited the access to ED and affected urgent surgical activities during and immediately after the 2-month pandemic-related national lockdown. METHODS: Data regarding patients who accessed to the surgical ED were retrospectively collected. Analyzed time periods included: "pre-COVID-19 era," "COVID-19 era" considered as the period of full national lockdown and "postCOVID-19 era" after easing of lockdown measures. Consecutive emergency surgical procedures and ED admissions before, during and after COVID-19-lockdown were retrieved and analyzed. RESULTS: There was a significant decrease in overall ED admissions and in all-specialty surgical consultations (P<0.01) throughout the outbreak. Once national lockdown was eased, we recorded a subsequent rebound 5-fold rise of emergency surgical procedures compared to COVID-19 group (P=0.011). Time-to-surgery was significantly greater in "COVID-19 era" and "post-COVID-19 era" compared to "pre-COVID-19" group (22.56 +/- 4.78, 75.99 +/- 15.89 and 16.73 +/- 1.76 hours, respectively) (P<0.01). A raised incidence of postoperative complications emerged in the "COVID-19 era" group (37.5%) compared to pre-and post-COVID groups (9.1% and 12.5%, respectively; P<0.001). Mortality rate in the "COVID-19 era" was 31.3% and 7.5% in "post-COVID-19" group (<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates the major reduction of emergency surgical procedures and overall, ED admissions caused by COVID-19 pandemic. The raised rate of postoperative complications and mortality might be likely due to the superior severity of surgical conditions observed in the "COVID-19 era" subjects together with a probable deferred pursuit of medical attention.
更多
查看译文
关键词
COVID-19, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要