Discharge outcomes among elderly patients undergoing emergency abdominal surgery: registry study of discharge data from Irish public hospitals.
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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND:Intra-abdominal emergency surgery is associated with high mortality risk and long length of hospital stay. The objective of this study was to explore variations in surgery rates, the relationship between admission source and discharge destination, and whether the postoperative length of stay was related to nursing home capacity in Irish counties. METHODS:Data on emergency hospital episodes for 2014-18 for patients aged over 65?years with a primary abdominal procedure code were obtained from the National Quality Assurance Improvement System. Data on population and nursing home capacity were obtained from the Central Statistics Office and the Health Information and Quality Authority. Episode rates per 100,000 were estimated for sex and age groups and compared between 26 Irish counties. The association between admission source and discharge destination was explored in terms episode numbers, length of stay and mortality. A negative binomial regression model estimated casemix adjusted excess post-operative length of stay. The correlation between excess post-operative length of stay and nursing home capacity was explored by linear regression. RESULTS:Overall, 4951 hospital episodes were included. The annual surgery rate ranged from 100 episodes per 100,000 65-69?years old to 250 per 100,000 85-89?year old men. 90% of the episodes were admitted from patients' home. Four in five of these patients returned to their home while 12.7% died at hospital. The proportion of episodes where patients returned to their home reduced to two in five for those aged 85-89?years. The post-operative length of stay was 13.6?days longer (p
SUBMITTER: McCann A
PROVIDER: S-EPMC7031938 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Feb
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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