AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated factors in Japanese hospitals linked to lower rates of operative mortality and failure-to-rescue (FTR) in major gastrointestinal surgeries.
  • An online questionnaire was conducted with 2119 departments, focusing on various institutional elements, leading to a comparison of the top and bottom performing hospitals based on FTR rates.
  • Results showed significant differences in operative mortality and FTR between high and low-performing hospitals, indicating that institutions with better resources and practices had improved patient outcomes after surgeries.

Article Abstract

Aim: We explored institutional factors in Japan associated with lower operative mortality and failure-to-rescue (FTR) rates for eight major gastrointestinal procedures.

Methods: A 22-item online questionnaire was sent to 2119 institutional departments (IDs) to examine the association between institutional factors and operative mortality and FTR rates. IDs were classified according to the number of annual surgeries, board certification status, and locality. In addition, the top 20% and bottom 20% of IDs were identified based on FTR rates and matched with the results of the questionnaire survey. Factors associated with operative mortality were selected by multivariate analysis.

Results: Of the 1083 IDs that responded to the questionnaire, 568 (213 382 patients) were included in the analysis. Operative morbidity, operative mortality, and FTR rates in the top 20% and bottom 20% of IDs were 13.1% and 8.4% ( < 0.001), 0.52% and 4.3% ( < 0.001), and 4.0% and 51.2% ( < 0.001), respectively. Based on the patients' background characteristics, the top 20% of IDs handled more advanced cases. No significant difference in locality was seen between better or worse hospital FTR rates, but fewer esophagectomies, hepatectomies, and pancreatoduodenectomies were performed in depopulated areas. Six items were found to be associated with operative mortality by multivariate logistic analysis. Only 50 (8.8%) IDs met all five factors related to better FTR rates.

Conclusions: The present findings indicate that several hospital factors surrounding surgical treatment, characterized by abundant human resources, are closely related to better postoperative recovery from severe complications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10914696PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ags3.12745DOI Listing

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