Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Special Edition: COVID-19 - January 2021 - Subscribe to Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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Elective isn't always optional Hospital-based elective cases are on pause in upstate New York because of COVID-19 hospitaliza- tion rates, according to Dave Uba, MBA, CEO of Buffalo Surgery Center in Amherst, N.Y. "At this time, surgery centers are not subject to the cessa- tion of elective surgeries," he says. "Some cases can be performed in hospitals if patients are in intractable pain and a delay in surgery has the potential to result in future morbidity and mortality. That being said, the majority of elective hospital- based procedures are being rescheduled." Before the resurgence of the virus in October and November, case volumes at Buffalo Surgery Center had returned to normal levels. Mr. Uba says cases are still significantly backlogged since the nationwide shutdown of elective procedures in April and May, and concedes his surgeons will likely never catch up. "But what we learned during the shutdown is that patients truly did suffer with- out having access to care," he says. "'Elective sur- gery' isn't a good description of life-changing pro- cedures that can alleviate or eliminate pain and improve quality of life." William Berry, MD, MPH, MPA, FACS, loosely defines elective surgery as procedures that can be delayed for six months without causing permanent harm. Knee replacements can be put off — although one could argue debilitating joint pain is reason enough to undergo surgery — but biopsies and treatments of malignancies should go on as planned. "There's evidence that a two-week delay can make a difference in the prognosis of breast cancer patients," points out Dr. Berry, associate director at Ariadne Labs, a joint center for health systems innovation at Brigham and Women's Hospital and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston. He's currently working remotely in San Diego, where COVID-19 cases have reached concerning levels. "ICU beds are down to about 13% of capacity," he says. "Resources become stressed once capacity hits less than 10%." The story is much the same in Massachusetts, where hospitals were filling up with COVID-19 patients in December, prompting the state government to order restrictions on elective procedures. "The main purpose of the order was to preserve inpatient capacity and repur- pose hospital staff," says Greg Deconciliis, PA-C, CACS, a physician assistant and administrator at Boston Out-Patient Surgical Suites in Waltham, Mass. "The original order said all ASCs and hospitals should revert to performing only essential cases. Fortunately, government leaders decided to curtail inpatient volume and preserve beds while allowing outpatient surgery. Procedures that improve the health of patients need to continue." Decisions about the status of elective proce- dures, and deciding where those procedures are performed, will ultimately be made at the local level, says Nancy H. Nielsen, MD, PhD, a healthcare policy expert at the University of Buffalo. "Surgeons are trying to be part of the solution by prioritizing patients who need treatment, because this recent surge could last into the spring," says Dr. Nielsen. "We know the next few months are going to be tough, but surgical providers continue to work hard and will persevere." Shifts in sites of care Mr. Uba is surprised by the number of cases still being performed in the main ORs of hospitals that could be done in surgery centers. "There's tremen- dous opportunity to increase outpatient volume and drive value for patients and payers," he says. "Surgery centers provide a safe, high-quality COVID-friendly option without using up valuable resources from hospitals, which can repurpose their facilities and staff to care for COVID patients during this surge." Jessica Billig, MD, MSc, a resident physician of plastic surgery at Michigan Medicine in Ann Arbor, says the pandemic has increased awareness of 2 2 • S U P P L E M E N T T O O U T P A T I E N T S U R G E R Y M A G A Z I N E • J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 1 Procedures that improve the health of patients need to continue. — Greg Deconciliis, PA-C, CACS

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