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A review of the nature and activity of a general surgical service in Ireland

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Abstract

The steady increase in hospital costs has led to demands for closer scrutiny of activity levels, workloads and outcomes. This study sought to examine these parameters in a typical district general surgical unit in this country. In the five year period 1985-89,11,227 inpatient and 3,354 outpatient procedures were performed; 83% of the inpatient procedures were elective and 17% were emergency surgical operations. All inpatient procedures were categorized: minor (41%), intermediate (42%) and major (17%). A prospective one year review in 1990/1991 confirmed the accuracy of the retrospective data. During that year 2,335 inpatient operations and 765 outpatient operations were performed, of which 80.5% of the inpatient operations were elective and 19.5% were emergency procedures. Of these 16.6% were major, 34.4% intermediate and 49% were minor operations. 60% of the operations were performed by consultants. The in-hospital surgical mortality for the 1 year prospective review was 1.35% and the perioperative mortality was 0.64%. The overall operation morbidity rate was 9% and the procedure-related morbidity was 4.7%. The wound infection rate was 2%. Of the common operations performed throughout the six year study period appendicectomies and external hernia operations accounted for 20% of the caseload; 14% were urological, 7% were breast and 6% were biliary operations. The average waiting time for elective admissions was less than 4 weeks. The average length of hospital stay and the bed occupancy rates did not change.

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Lavelle, J., Davies, M.G., Connolly, J.A. et al. A review of the nature and activity of a general surgical service in Ireland. I.J.M.S. 161, 127–130 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02942087

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