September 07, 2018
2 min read
Save

Use of a satellite orthopedic trauma OR may increase capacity

You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

Results published in The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery showed use of a dedicated satellite orthopedic trauma OR may increase capacity without compromising patient safety with proper screening protocols for appropriate patient selection.

Perspective from Andrew N. Pollak, MD

Peter Waters photo
Peter M. Waters

Peter M. Waters, MD, and colleagues established a dedicated orthopedic trauma surgery OR in a satellite hospital location for 3 days per week in the summer and for 2 days per week for the rest of the year in addition to the daily emergency surgical room on the main campus. Researchers considered nonemergency, non-multitrauma operative fracture cases that presented at a tertiary care facility emergency department or orthopedic clinic for satellite referral. When opening existed in the schedule, short elective cases were performed, according to researchers, and patients selected for transfer were discharged home with satellite OR scheduling or approved for same-day satellite location admission.

Among 480 cases completed in the satellite OR from June 2016 to June 2017, results showed type-II supracondylar humeral fractures were the most common trauma cases. Researchers noted an average of 41.75 trauma cases and 11.25 elective cases per month during the summer months with 3.15 trauma cases and 0.85 elective cases per day compared with an average of 22.78 trauma cases and seven elective cases per month during the non-summer months with 2.93 trauma cases and 0.90 elective cases per day. According to results, seven of the 17 postoperative issues involved symptomatic hardware, while the remaining complications were not surgeon or geographic site specific. Researchers found no intraoperative complications, compartment syndrome episodes or patients who required transfer back to the tertiary care facility for unexpected or serious medical issues.

“Managing orthopedic trauma in a level 1 pediatric center is greatly aided by cooperative triage of emergency, urgent and timely delayed cases into both the main hospital and satellite ORs,” Waters told Healio.com/Orthopedics. – by Casey Tingle

 

Disclosures: The authors report no relevant financial disclosures.