AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the impact of COVID-19 on hip fracture patient care at a trauma center in Scotland during the first lockdown.
  • It analyzed data from 225 patients (108 in 2019, 117 in 2020) focusing on outcomes like time to surgery, hospital stay, and 30-day mortality.
  • No significant changes were found in mortality rates or surgery times, but the length of hospital stays decreased significantly from 12 days to 6.5 days.

Article Abstract

Background And Purpose Of The Study: This study reviewed whether the response to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic affected the care for hip fracture patients at a major trauma centre in Scotland during the first-wave lock-down period.

Methods: All patients referred to Orthopaedics with a hip fracture in a major trauma centre in Scotland were captured between 14 th March and 28 th May (11 weeks) in 2020 and 2019. Patients were identified using electronic patient records. The primary outcomes are time to theatre, length of admission and 30-day mortality. Secondary outcomes are COVID-19 prevalence, duration of surgery, proportion of patients to theatre within 36 hours and COVID-19 positive 30-day mortality from time of surgery. 225 patients were included: 108 from 2019 and 117 from 2020.

The Main Findings: 30-day mortality was 3.7% (n=4) in 2019 and 8.5% (n=10) in 2020 (p=0.142). There was no statistical difference with time to theatre (p=0.150) nor duration of theatre (p=0.450). Duration of admission was reduced from 12 days to 6.5 days (p=<0.005). 4 patients tested positive for COVID-19 during admission, one 5 days after discharge, all underwent surgical management. 30-day mortality for COVID-19 positive patients during admission was 40%. COVID-19 prevalence of patients that were tested (n=89) was 5.62%.

Conclusions: This study has shown the care of hip fracture patients has been maintained during the COVID-19 pandemic. There is no statistically significant change in mortality, time to theatre, and duration of surgery, however, the patient's admission duration was significantly less than the 2019 cohort.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7904444PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.surge.2021.01.012DOI Listing

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