An Unencumbered Acute Care Surgeon Improves Delivery of Emergent Surgical Care for Cholecystectomy Patients.

Alexis L Cralley, Clay C Burlew, Charles J Fox, Fredric M Pieracci, K Barry K Platnick, Eric M Campion, Mitchell J Cohen, Ernest E Moore, Ryan A Lawless
Author Information
  1. Alexis L Cralley: Department of Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado.
  2. Clay C Burlew: Department of Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado.
  3. Charles J Fox: Department of Surgery, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
  4. Fredric M Pieracci: Department of Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado.
  5. K Barry K Platnick: Department of Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado.
  6. Eric M Campion: Department of Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado.
  7. Mitchell J Cohen: Department of Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado.
  8. Ernest E Moore: Department of Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado.
  9. Ryan A Lawless: Department of Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado.

Abstract

Introduction: Many patients utilize the Emergency Room (ER) for primary care, resulting in overburdened ERs, strained resources, and delays in care. To combat this, many centers have adopted a Trauma/Acute Care Surgery (TACS) service providing specialty surgeons whose primary work is the unencumbered surgical availability to emergency surgery patients. To evaluate our programs' efficacy, we investigated cholecystectomies as a common urgent procedure representative of services provided. We hypothesized that the adoption of a TACS service would result in improved access to care as evidence by decreased ER visits prior to cholecystectomy, improved time to cholecystectomy, and decreased hospital length of stay (LOS).
Methods: All patients that underwent urgent cholecystectomy from January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2018 were reviewed. The unencumbered TACS surgeon was implemented on July 1, 2018. Prior ER visits involving biliary symptoms, time from admission to cholecystectomy, and hospital LOS were compared.
Results: Of the 322 urgent cholecystectomies over the study period, 165 were performed prior and 157 following adoption of the TACS structure. The average number of ER visits for biliary symptoms prior to cholecystectomy decreased from 1.4 to 1.2 (p = 0.01). Time from admission to cholecystectomy was 28.3 hours and 27.3 hours respectively (p = 0.74). Average LOS decreased following the restructure (3.1 vs 2.5 days; p = 0.03).
Conclusion: Implementation of an unencumbered TACS surgeon managing urgent surgical disease improves access to and delivery of surgical services for cholecystectomy patients in a safety net, level one trauma center. Further research is necessary to determine potential improvements in hospital cost and patient satisfaction.

Keywords

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MeSH Term

Cholecystectomy
Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic
Emergency Service, Hospital
Humans
Length of Stay
Retrospective Studies
Surgeons
Treatment Outcome

Word Cloud

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