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Task-Sharing for Emergency Neurosurgery: A Retrospective Cohort Study in the Philippines. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examines the impacts of task-sharing (TS) in neurosurgery in the Philippines, particularly in responding to a shortage of neurosurgeons and high neurotrauma cases.
  • TS providers (general surgery residents) conducted 95 out of 214 emergency neurosurgeries, with no significant differences in mortality rates, reoperation, or pneumonia between TS providers and neurosurgeons.
  • The findings suggest that task-sharing can be an effective model, as TS patients had shorter hospital stays and outcomes similar to those treated by neurosurgeons.

Article Abstract

Objective: The safety and effectiveness of task-sharing (TS) in neurosurgery, delegating clinical roles to non-neurosurgeons, is not well understood. This study evaluated an ongoing TS model in the Philippines, where neurosurgical workforce deficits are compounded with a large neurotrauma burden.

Methods: Medical records from emergency neurosurgical admissions to 2 hospitals were reviewed (January 2015-June 2018): Bicol Medical Center (BMC), a government hospital in which emergency neurosurgery is chiefly performed by general surgery residents (TS providers), and Mother Seton Hospital, an adjacent private hospital where neurosurgery consultants are the primary surgeons. Univariable and multivariable linear and logistic regression compared provider-associated outcomes.

Results: Of 214 emergency neurosurgery operations, TS providers performed 95 and neurosurgeons, 119. TS patients were more often male (88.4% vs. 73.1%;  = 0.007), younger (mean age, 27.6 vs. 50.5 years; < 0.001), and had experienced road traffic accidents (69.1% vs. 31.4%; < 0.001). There were no significant differences between Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores on admission. Provider type was not associated with mortality (neurosurgeons, 20.2%; TS, 17.9%;  = 0.68), reoperation, or pneumonia. No significant differences were observed for GCS improvement between admission and discharge or in-hospital GCS improvement, including or excluding inpatient deaths. TS patients had shorter lengths of stay (17.3 days vs. 24.4 days; coefficient, -6.67; 95% confidence interval, -13.01 to -0.34;  < 0.05) and were more likely to undergo tracheostomy (odds ratio, 3.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.30-7.40;  = 0.01).

Conclusions: This study, one of the first to examine outcomes of neurosurgical TS, shows that a strategic TS model for emergency neurosurgery produces comparable outcomes to the local neurosurgeons.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7154225PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wnsx.2019.100058DOI Listing

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