Distance travelled to hospital for emergency laparotomy and the effect of travel time on mortality: cohort study

Author:

Salih TomORCID,Martin Peter,Poulton Tom,Oliver Charles MORCID,Bassett Mike G,Moonesinghe S Ramani

Abstract

ObjectivesTo evaluate whether distance and estimated travel time to hospital for patients undergoing emergency laparotomy is associated with postoperative mortality.DesignNational cohort study using data from the National Emergency Laparotomy Audit.Setting171 National Health Service hospitals in England and Wales.Participants22 772 adult patients undergoing emergency surgery on the gastrointestinal tract between 2013 and 2016.Main outcome measuresMortality from any cause and in any place at 30 and 90 days after surgery.ResultsMedian on-road distance between home and hospital was 8.4 km (IQR 4.7–16.7 km) with a median estimated travel time of 16 min. Median time from hospital admission to operating theatre was 12.7 hours. Older patients live on average further from hospital and patients from areas of increased socioeconomic deprivation live on average less far away.We included estimated travel time as a continuous variable in multilevel logistic regression models adjusting for important confounders and found no evidence for an association with 30-day mortality (OR per 10 min of travel time=1.02, 95% CI 0.97 to 1.06, p=0.512) or 90-day mortality (OR 1.02, 95 % CI 0.97 to 1.06, p=0.472).The results were similar when we limited our analysis to the subgroup of 5386 patients undergoing the most urgent surgery. 30-day mortality: OR=1.02 (95% CI 0.95 to 1.10, p=0.574) and 90-day mortality: OR=1.01 (95% CI 0.94 to 1.08, p=0.858).ConclusionsIn the UK NHS, estimated travel time between home and hospital was not a primary determinant of short-term mortality following emergency gastrointestinal surgery.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Health Policy

Reference61 articles.

1. National Emergency Laparotomy Audit (NELA) Project Team . First patient report of the National emergency laparotomy audit. London, 2014. Available: www.nela.org.uk/reports

2. National Emergency Laparotomy Audit (NELA) Project Team . Second patient report of the National emergency laparotomy audit. London, 2016. Available: www.nela.org.uk/reports

3. National Emergency Laparotomy Audit (NELA) Project Team . Third patient report of the National emergency laparotomy audit. London, 2017. Available: www.nela.org.uk/reports

4. National Emergency Laparotomy Audit (NELA) Project Team . Fourth patient report of the National emergency laparotomy audit. London, 2018. Available: www.nela.org.uk/reports

5. Organisational factors and mortality after an emergency laparotomy: multilevel analysis of 39 903 national emergency laparotomy audit patients;Oliver;Br J Anaesth,2018

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