Does the healthcare system know what to cut under the pandemic emergency pressure? An observational study on geographic variation of surgical procedures in Italy

Objectives During 2020 many countries reduced the number of elective surgeries to free up beds and cope with the COVID-19 outbreak. This situation led healthcare systems to prioritise elective interventions and reduce the overall volumes of treatments.The aim of this paper is to analyse whether the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Milena Vainieri, Sabina Nuti, Domenico Mantoan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2022-11-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/12/11/e061415.full
_version_ 1811186583546626048
author Milena Vainieri
Sabina Nuti
Domenico Mantoan
author_facet Milena Vainieri
Sabina Nuti
Domenico Mantoan
author_sort Milena Vainieri
collection DOAJ
description Objectives During 2020 many countries reduced the number of elective surgeries to free up beds and cope with the COVID-19 outbreak. This situation led healthcare systems to prioritise elective interventions and reduce the overall volumes of treatments.The aim of this paper is to analyse whether the pandemic and the prioritisation policies on elective surgery were done considering the potential inappropriateness highlighted by the measurement of geographic variation.Setting The setting of the study is acute care with a focus on elective surgical procedures. Data were analysed at the Italian regional level.Participants The study is observational and relies on national hospitalisation records from 2019 to 2020. The analyses refer to the 21 Italian regional health systems, using 48 917 records for 2019 and 33 821 for 2020. The surgical procedures analysed are those considered at high risk of unwarranted variation: coronary angioplasty, cholecystectomy, colectomy, knee replacement, hysterectomy, tonsillectomy, hip replacement and vein stripping.Primary and secondary outcome measures Primary measures were the hospitalisation rate and its reduction per procedure, to understand the level of potential inappropriateness. Secondary measures were the SD and high/low ratio, to map the level of geographic variation.Results For some procedures, there is a linear negative relationship (eg, tonsillectomy: ρ = −0.92, p<0.01; vein stripping: ρ = −0.93, p<0.01) between the reduction in hospitalisation and its starting point. The only two procedures for which no significant differences were registered are cholecystectomy (ρ = −0.22, p=0.31) and hysterectomy (ρ = −0.22, p=0.33). In particular, in all cases, data show that regions with higher 2019 hospitalisation rates registered a larger reduction.Conclusions The Italian data show that the pandemic seems to have led hospital managers and health professionals to cut surgical interventions more likely to be inappropriate. Hence, these findings can inform and guide the healthcare system to manage unwarranted variation when coming back to the new normal. This new starting point (lower volumes in some selected elective surgical procedures) should be used to plan elective surgical treatments that can be cancelled because of their high risk of inappropriateness.
first_indexed 2024-04-11T13:48:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f0c75b63dc014e11ac41d5f6b47f853b
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2044-6055
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-11T13:48:58Z
publishDate 2022-11-01
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format Article
series BMJ Open
spelling doaj.art-f0c75b63dc014e11ac41d5f6b47f853b2022-12-22T04:20:52ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552022-11-01121110.1136/bmjopen-2022-061415Does the healthcare system know what to cut under the pandemic emergency pressure? An observational study on geographic variation of surgical procedures in ItalyMilena Vainieri0Sabina Nuti1Domenico Mantoan2Management and Health Laboratory, Institute of Management and EMbeDS Department, Scuola Superiore Sant`Anna, Pisa, ItalyManagement and Healthcare Laboratory, Institute of Management and Department EMbeDS, Scuola Superiore Sant`Anna, Pisa, ItalyAGENAS, Agenzia Nazionale per i Servizi Sanitari Regionali, Roma, ItalyObjectives During 2020 many countries reduced the number of elective surgeries to free up beds and cope with the COVID-19 outbreak. This situation led healthcare systems to prioritise elective interventions and reduce the overall volumes of treatments.The aim of this paper is to analyse whether the pandemic and the prioritisation policies on elective surgery were done considering the potential inappropriateness highlighted by the measurement of geographic variation.Setting The setting of the study is acute care with a focus on elective surgical procedures. Data were analysed at the Italian regional level.Participants The study is observational and relies on national hospitalisation records from 2019 to 2020. The analyses refer to the 21 Italian regional health systems, using 48 917 records for 2019 and 33 821 for 2020. The surgical procedures analysed are those considered at high risk of unwarranted variation: coronary angioplasty, cholecystectomy, colectomy, knee replacement, hysterectomy, tonsillectomy, hip replacement and vein stripping.Primary and secondary outcome measures Primary measures were the hospitalisation rate and its reduction per procedure, to understand the level of potential inappropriateness. Secondary measures were the SD and high/low ratio, to map the level of geographic variation.Results For some procedures, there is a linear negative relationship (eg, tonsillectomy: ρ = −0.92, p<0.01; vein stripping: ρ = −0.93, p<0.01) between the reduction in hospitalisation and its starting point. The only two procedures for which no significant differences were registered are cholecystectomy (ρ = −0.22, p=0.31) and hysterectomy (ρ = −0.22, p=0.33). In particular, in all cases, data show that regions with higher 2019 hospitalisation rates registered a larger reduction.Conclusions The Italian data show that the pandemic seems to have led hospital managers and health professionals to cut surgical interventions more likely to be inappropriate. Hence, these findings can inform and guide the healthcare system to manage unwarranted variation when coming back to the new normal. This new starting point (lower volumes in some selected elective surgical procedures) should be used to plan elective surgical treatments that can be cancelled because of their high risk of inappropriateness.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/12/11/e061415.full
spellingShingle Milena Vainieri
Sabina Nuti
Domenico Mantoan
Does the healthcare system know what to cut under the pandemic emergency pressure? An observational study on geographic variation of surgical procedures in Italy
BMJ Open
title Does the healthcare system know what to cut under the pandemic emergency pressure? An observational study on geographic variation of surgical procedures in Italy
title_full Does the healthcare system know what to cut under the pandemic emergency pressure? An observational study on geographic variation of surgical procedures in Italy
title_fullStr Does the healthcare system know what to cut under the pandemic emergency pressure? An observational study on geographic variation of surgical procedures in Italy
title_full_unstemmed Does the healthcare system know what to cut under the pandemic emergency pressure? An observational study on geographic variation of surgical procedures in Italy
title_short Does the healthcare system know what to cut under the pandemic emergency pressure? An observational study on geographic variation of surgical procedures in Italy
title_sort does the healthcare system know what to cut under the pandemic emergency pressure an observational study on geographic variation of surgical procedures in italy
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/12/11/e061415.full
work_keys_str_mv AT milenavainieri doesthehealthcaresystemknowwhattocutunderthepandemicemergencypressureanobservationalstudyongeographicvariationofsurgicalproceduresinitaly
AT sabinanuti doesthehealthcaresystemknowwhattocutunderthepandemicemergencypressureanobservationalstudyongeographicvariationofsurgicalproceduresinitaly
AT domenicomantoan doesthehealthcaresystemknowwhattocutunderthepandemicemergencypressureanobservationalstudyongeographicvariationofsurgicalproceduresinitaly