“Emergency
surgeries performed on a weekend may have poorer results than the
same operation performed on a weekday, a new study concludes,” says
an article in the New York Times.
However,
the statement is not true.
First
of all, it implies
that all operations done on weekends have poorer results by failing
to mention the fact that the study that found this result only
concerned patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)—that is,
ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. And
although
the paper looked at both types of IBD, only patients with ulcerative
colitis were found to have significantly different outcomes based on
day of admission.
Second
and most important, the paper's significant result was that patients
who were admitted
on weekend days had worse results. On page 6 of the paper (the full text of which is available online), the authors state,
“Hospitalisation [sic,
the
journal is from the UK]
day of surgery did not influence post-operative outcomes.”
To
recap. What the paper really says it that for one type of IBD,
ulcerative colitis, admission to the hospital on a weekend day, not
necessarily the day the surgery took place, is associated with a
significant increase in mechanical wound complications (I assume they
mean wound dehiscence or “burst” wound) and need for repeat
laparotomy.
Some
limitations of the study are as follows:
- It is a retrospective review of an administrative, not a clinical database.
- There was no information about the surgeons or other physicians in the database.
- It is quite possible that by chance more patients in the weekend admission group were on corticosteroids, which are known to have a negative effect on wound healing.
- The authors admit that “Unmeasured confounders beyond what we were able to capture in our study could also influence the estimates.”
- It is not surprising that rates of wound dehiscence and need for repeat laparotomy would both increased since the former begets the latter.
- The authors could not explain why wound problems occurred in ulcerative colitis but not Crohn's disease patients, nor could they explain what mechanism could lead to the adverse outcomes they found.
There
is a plethora of literature on whether or not a “weekend effect”
really exists. The Times article would have been better if in
addition to getting the facts straight, some balance had
been
offered.
A
brief PubMed search reveals that patients admitted with strokes on
weekends fare
worse or
do not fare worse according to which study you read. Similarly,
patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding fare
worse or do
not
fare worse
if admitted on weekends. Take your pick.
The
times article concludes with a quote from the lead author, “If you
need surgery, you should get it.”
That
is the
one part
of the article I can agree with.
3 comments:
I have a theory. Most people hate being called in from home after hours and on weekends. Maybe we aren't doing our best work then.
I agree that most people don't enjoy being called in. But I have to say, I never gave it less than my best effort and I would bet that holds true for most physicians.
Don't forget that the above-mentioned study found that the surgery itself was not the problem on weekends.
That was somewhat tongue-in-cheek there, which is about the response that "study" deserved.
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