International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology | 2021

Impact of the novel coronavirus on surgical practices at a tertiary pediatric hospital: A 3 year cross-sectional study

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


\n Objective\n The novel coronavirus (COVID-19) forced unprecedented changes in pediatric otolaryngology workflow in the early pandemic, particularly due to the postponement of elective procedures. In turn, this has impacted timely treatment of patients and ability to train residents and fellows. The objective is to characterize how surgical practices in pediatric otolaryngology have been impacted by the pandemic through a cross sectional analysis over three years.\n \n Methods\n This cross-sectional study focuses on patients who underwent surgical procedures within the department of otolaryngology at a single tertiary pediatric hospital. Descriptive statistical analysis was used to compare subsets of patients from pre-pandemic in 2019, early-pandemic in 2020, and late-pandemic in 2021.\n \n Results\n Operative volume decreased by 87.57% in the early pandemic and 36.86% in the late pandemic. In the early pandemic, the greatest decreases were seen in airway reconstruction (100%), adenotonsillectomy (96.4%), adenoidectomy (94.7%), myringotomy with tympanostomy tube insertion (94.6%), frenulectomy (94.1%), and sinonasal procedures (93.3%), while in the late-pandemic adenotonsillectomy (42.4%) and myringotomy with tympanostomy tube insertion (70.1%) remained reduced when compared to pre-pandemic volume. Increased average case lengths in the early-pandemic (78.28\u202f±\u202f51.95\u202fmin) and late-pandemic (71.91\u202f±\u202f70.76\u202fmin) were observed when compared to pre-pandemic (52.26\u202f±\u202f39.20\u202fmin) (p\u202f<\u202f0.001). An increased proportion of multidisciplinary cases were completed in 2020 and 2021 (p\u202f<\u202f0.001). In the 2020, 25% of cases were completed without trainee involvement. There was an overall decrease in case numbers for trainees and increase in cases without their involvement when compared to 2019 and 2021.\n \n Conclusion\n The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a decrease in pediatric otolaryngology surgical procedures, particularly at the onset of the pandemic. While surgical trainees saw a dramatic reduction in case numbers early on, one year into the pandemic case volume is increasing and trending to pre-pandemic numbers. More complex cases, as represented by patients requiring longer operative times, inpatient status, and more frequently multidisciplinary care, were seen in the early pandemic, while drastic reductions were seen in routine outpatient procedures.\n

Volume 151
Pages 110923 - 110923
DOI 10.1016/j.ijporl.2021.110923
Language English
Journal International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology

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