Literature DB >> 33686347

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown on the utilization of acute surgical care in the State of Salzburg, Austria: retrospective, multicenter analysis.

Jaroslav Presl1, Martin Varga1, Christof Mittermair2, Stefan Mitterwallner3, Michael Weitzendorfer1, Ana Gabersek1, Kurosch Borhanian1, Andreas Heuberger3, Helmut Weiss2, Klaus Emmanuel1, Burkhard von Rahden1, Oliver Owen Koch1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Some medical disciplines have reported a strong decrease of emergencies during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic; however, the effect of the lockdown on general surgery emergencies remains unclear.
METHODS: This study is a retrospective, multicenter analysis of general surgery emergency operations performed during the period from 1 March to 15th 2020 lockdown and in the same time period of 2019 in three medical centers providing emergency surgical care to the area Salzburg-North, Austria.
RESULTS: In total 165 emergency surgeries were performed in the study period of 2020 compared to 287 in 2019. This is a significant decrease of 122 (42.5%) emergency surgeries during the COVID-19 lockdown (p = 0.005). The length of hospital stay was reduced to 3 days in 2020 compared to 4 in 2019. Appendectomy remained the most performed emergency surgery for both periods; however the number of surgeries was reduced to less than a half, with 72 cases in 2019 and 33 cases in 2020 (p = 0.118). Emergency colon surgery observed the strongest decrease of 75% from 17 cases in 2019 to 4 in 2020. In addition, the emergency abdominal wall hernia, cholecystectomies for acute cholecystitis, small surgeries and proctological emergencies recorded drops of 70%, 39%, 33% and 47% respectively. The strongest reduction in frequencies of emergency surgeries was reported from the designated COVID center in the examined region.
CONCLUSIONS: Emergency general surgery is an essential service that continues to run under all circumstances. Our data show that COVID-19-related restrictions have resulted in a significant decrease in the utilization of acute surgical care.
© The Author(s) 2021.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Appendectomy; Colorectal surgery; Emergency; Pandemic; SARS-CoV‑2

Year:  2021        PMID: 33686347      PMCID: PMC7930888          DOI: 10.1007/s10353-021-00692-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Surg        ISSN: 1682-1769            Impact factor:   0.953


  3 in total

1.  Management of Symptomatic Gallstone Disease during COVID-19 Lockdown in a High-Resource Setting: Is There a Need for Treatment Alterations?

Authors:  Jens Strohaeker; Julia Sabrow; Can Yurttas; Alfred Königsrainer; Ruth Ladurner; Felix Hoenes
Journal:  Visc Med       Date:  2022-01-27

2.  COVID-19 and Acute Cholecystitis Management: A Systematic Review of Current Literature.

Authors:  Konstantinos Stavridis; Ioannis Liosis; Michael K Konstantinidis; Georgios Kondylis; Argyrios Ioannidis
Journal:  Front Surg       Date:  2022-04-12

3.  Ventral hernia repair under neuraxial anesthesia.

Authors:  Paolo Germanò; Stefano Siboni; Pamela Milito; Gaetano Mautone; Marco Resta; Luigi Bonavina
Journal:  Eur Surg       Date:  2021-07-20       Impact factor: 0.953

  3 in total

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