#PAGE_PARAMS# #ADS_HEAD_SCRIPTS# #MICRODATA#

Cancellations of scheduled surgical procedures in three Czech university hospitals – a prospective study


Authors: Stříteská Jana 1;  Štourač Petr 2;  Beranová Kateřina 3;  Krajtlová Eliška 4;  Špunda Jan 3;  Cvachovec Karel 3;  Ševčík Pavel 2;  Černý Vladimír 1
Authors‘ workplace: Klinika anesteziologie, resuscitace a intenzivní medicíny, Univerzita Karlova v Praze, Lékařská fakulta v Hradci Králové, Fakultní nemocnice Hradec Králové 1;  Klinika anesteziologie, resuscitace a intenzivní medicíny, Lékařská fakulta Masarykovy univerzity Brno, Fakultní nemocnice Brno 2;  Klinika anesteziologie a resuscitace 2. lékařské fakulty Univerzity Karlovy a Fakultní nemocnice Motol, Praha 3;  Lékařská fakulta Masarykovy univerzity Brno 4
Published in: Anest. intenziv. Med., 20, 2009, č. 5, s. 241-245
Category: Anaesthesiology - Original Paper

Overview

Objective:
Scheduled surgery cancellations are a significant problem in peri-operative medicine. They have a negative impact on every hospital economy and patient satisfaction with the quality of healthcare. The goal of the study was to establish the rate and main reasons for elective surgery cancellations in three university hospitals in the Czech Republic in 2008.

Design:
Prospective, observational, multi-centre survey.

Setting:
Anaesthesiology departments of tertiary care hospitals.

Materials and methods:
Every cancellation of an elective case under general or regional anaesthesia was recorded by the anaesthesiologist on a survey form. The form included the detailed reason for the cancellation and the person initiating the cancellation (anaesthesiologist, surgeon, patient). The obtained data were analysed using the methods of descriptive statistics.

Results:
In 2008, 66358 operations were scheduled as elective procedures in the three hospitals. In total 1248 cases (1.88%) were cancelled; 740 cases (59.3%) due to organizational reasons and 446 cases (35.7%) due to medical reasons. Anaesthesiologists initiated the cancellation of 293 cases (23.5%), surgeons cancelled 873 operations (70%) and patients refused to undergo surgery or anaesthesia in 82 cases (6.5%). The mean age of patients whose procedure got cancelled was 52 years. The results from the three hospitals were comparable.

Conclusion:
The number of cancelled elective cases was lower than in data from the literature. However, most of the cancellations were potentially avoidable particularly with better operating suite management. The differences among the participating hospitals may be influenced by the different structure and capacity of the operating theatres and the method of scheduling elective operations.

Keywords:
operations – operating theatres – schedules – organizational management


Sources

1. Knox, M., Myers, E., Wilson, I., Hurley, M. The impact of pre-operative assessment clinics on elective surgical case cancellations. The Surgeon, 2007, 7, 2, p. 76–78.

2. Zafar, A., Mufti, T. S., Griffin, S., Ahmed, S., Ansari, J. A. Cancelled elective general surgical operations in Ayub Teaching Hospital. J. Ayub Med. Coll. Abbottabad, 2007, 19, 3, p. 64–66.

3. Sanjay, P., Dodds, A., Miller, E., Arumugam, P. J., Woodward, A. Cancelled elective operations: an observational study from a district general hospital. J. Health Organ. Manag., 2007, 21, 1, p. 54–58.

4. Sundaram, K., Sankaran, S., Amerally, P., Avery, C. M. E. Cancellation of elective oral and maxillofacial operations. British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, 2007, 45, p. 656–657.

5. Hariharan, S., Chen, D., Merritt-Charles, L. Evaluation of the utilization of the preanaesthetic clinics in a University teaching hospital. BMC Health Services Research, 2006, 6, p. 59.

6. Jonnalagadda, R., Walrond, E. R., Hariharan, S., Walrond, M., Prasad, C. Evaluation of the reasons for cancellations and delays of surgical procedures in a developing country. Int. J. Clin. Pract., 2005, 59, 6, p. 716–720.

7. Hussain, A. M., Khan, F. A. Anaesthetic reasons for cancellation of elective surgical inpatients on the day of surgery in a teaching hospital. J. Pract. Med. Assoc., 2005, 55, 9, p. 374–378.

8. Schofield, W. N., Rubin, G. L., Piza, M., Lai, Y. Y., Sindhusake, D., Fearnside, M. R., Klineberg, P. L. Cancellation of operations on the day of intended surgery at a major Australian referral hospital. Med. J. Austr., 2005, 182, 12, p. 612–615.

9. Ferschl, M. B., Tung, A., Sweitzer, B. J., Huo, D., Glick, D. B. Preoperative Clinic Visits Reduce Operating Room Cancellations and Delays. Anesthesiology, 2005, 103, 4, p. 855–859.

10. Van Klei, W. A., Moons, K. G. M., Rutten, C. L. G., Schuurhuis, A., Knape, J. T. A., Kalkman, C. J., Grobbee, D. E. The effect of outpatient preoperative evaluation of hospital inpatients on cancellation of surgery and length of hospital stay. Anesth. Analg., 2002, 94, p. 644–649.

11. Černý, V. et al. Indikátory kvality anesteziologické péče – doporučení ČSARIM. Anest. intenziv. Med., 2008, 19, s. 325–326.

Labels
Anaesthesiology, Resuscitation and Inten Intensive Care Medicine
Login
Forgotten password

Enter the email address that you registered with. We will send you instructions on how to set a new password.

Login

Don‘t have an account?  Create new account

#ADS_BOTTOM_SCRIPTS#