AI Article Synopsis

  • Centralized management of surgical queues was implemented through the "Patients with Surgical Indication" (PSI) system in a Brazilian public tertiary hospital, aimed at reducing surgical waiting times and managing oncological surgeries during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • A retrospective study from 2016 to 2022 showed that the median waiting time for surgeries decreased significantly from 98 days in 2016 to 14 days in 2022, along with a drop in the backlog of surgical requests.
  • The study concluded that the PSI system effectively improved surgery scheduling and waiting time management in Brazil, demonstrating its value in rationing healthcare services during challenging times.

Article Abstract

Background: Centralized management of queues helps to reduce the surgical waiting time in the publicly funded healthcare system, but this is not a reality in the Brazilian Unified Healthcare System (BUHS). We describe the implementation of the "Patients with Surgical Indication" (PSI) in a Brazilian public tertiary hospital, the impact on waiting time, and its use in rationing oncological surgeries during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Methods: Retrospective observational study of elective surgical requests (2016-2022) in a Brazilian general, public, tertiary university hospital. We recovered information regarding the inflows (indications), outflows and their reasons, the number of patients, and waiting time in queue.

Results: We enrolled 82,844 indications in the PSI (2016-2022). The waiting time (median and interquartile range) in days decreased from 98(48;168) in 2016 to 14(3;152) in 2022 (p < 0.01). The same occurred with the backlog that ranged from 6,884 in 2016 to 844 in 2022 (p < 001). During the Pandemic, there was a reduction in the number of non-oncological surgeries per month (95% confidence interval) of -10.9(-18.0;-3.8) during Phase I (January 2019-March 2020), maintenance in Phase II (April 2020-August 2021) 0.1(-10.0;10.4) and increment in Phase III (September 2021-December 2022) of 23.0(15.3;30.8). In the oncological conditions, these numbers were 0.6(-2.1;3.3) for Phase I, an increase of 3.2(0.7;5.6) in Phase II and 3.9(1,4;6,4) in Phase III.

Conclusion: Implementing a centralized list of surgical indications and developing queue management principles proved feasible, with effective rationing. It unprecedentedly demonstrated the decrease in the median waiting time in Brazil.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10916210PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-10735-4DOI Listing

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