Impact of surgeon and hospital factors on length of stay after colorectal surgery systematic review

Author:

Bayat Zubair123ORCID,Guidolin Keegan1ORCID,Elsolh Basheer1ORCID,De Castro Charmaine3,Kennedy Erin123ORCID,Govindarajan Anand123

Affiliation:

1. Division of General Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Toronto , Toronto, Ontario , Canada

2. Institute of Health Policy Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto , Toronto, Ontario , Canada

3. Sinai Health System , Toronto, Ontario , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Background Although length of stay (LOS) after colorectal surgery (CRS) is associated with worse patient and system level outcomes, the impact of surgeon and hospital-level factors on LOS after CRS has not been well investigated. The aim of this study was to synthesize the evidence for the impact of surgeon and hospital-level factors on LOS after CRS. Methods A comprehensive database search was conducted using terms related to LOS and CRS. Studies were included if they reported the effect of surgeon or hospital factors on LOS after elective CRS. The evidence for the effect of each surgeon and hospital factor on LOS was synthesized using vote counting by direction of effect, taking risk of bias into consideration. Results A total of 13 946 unique titles and abstracts were screened, and 69 studies met the inclusion criteria. All studies were retrospective and assessed a total of eight factors. Surgeon factors such as increasing surgeon volume, colorectal surgical specialty, and progression along a learning curve were significantly associated with decreased LOS (effect seen in 87.5 per cent, 100 per cent, and 93.3 per cent of studies respectively). In contrast, hospital factors such as hospital volume and teaching hospital status were not significantly associated with LOS. Conclusion Provider-related factors were found to be significantly associated with LOS after elective CRS. In particular, surgeon-related factors related to experience specifically impacted LOS, whereas hospital-related factors did not. Understanding the mechanisms underlying these relationships may allow for tailoring of interventions to reduce LOS.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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