Increased mortality for elective surgery during summer vacation: A longitudinal analysis of nationwide data

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Abstract

Surgical safety during vacation periods may be influenced by the interplay of several factors, including workers' leave, hospital activity, climate, and the variety of patient cases. This study aimed to highlight an annually recurring peak of surgical mortality during summer in France and explore its main predictors. We selected all elective of open surgical procedures performed in French hospitals between 2007 and 2012. Surgical mortality variation was analyzed over time in relation to workers leaving on vacation, the volume of procedures performed by hospitals, and temperature changes. We ran a multilevel logistic regression for exploring the determinants of surgical mortality, taking into account the clustering of patients within hospitals and adjusting for patient and hospital characteristics. A total of 609 French hospitals had 8,926,120 discharges related to open elective surgery. During 6 years, we found a recurring mortality peak of 1.15%(95% CI 1.09-1.20) in August compared with 0.81% (0.79-0.82, p

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Caillet, P., Payet, C., Polazzi, S., Carty, M. J., Lifante, J. C., & Duclos, A. (2015). Increased mortality for elective surgery during summer vacation: A longitudinal analysis of nationwide data. PLoS ONE, 10(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0137754

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