Abstract

Abstract Aim To assess the effect of a ‘rapid-access’ musculoskeletal unit, established in March 2020, as part of the Royal Devon & Exeter hospital COVID response, with direct assessment of hand trauma by the Plastic Surgery department staff, on treatment timelines and national guidance compliance for closed paediatric hand fractures. Method This was a retrospective review from 1st January to 31st December 2019 and a prospective study from the 1st April to 15th June 2020. The retrospective cases were collated by health informatics. The prospective data was recorded on the department’s database. Exclusion criteria: nail bed injuries with tuft fractures, ligament injuries only, open fractures and patients aged 18 at time of surgery. Results In 2019 the majority (73%) of patients (n = 26) were referred within 48hrs but waited a median of 5 days to be seen in clinic by a hand surgeon resulting in significant delays in treatment. After service reconfiguration in 2020, all patients (n = 6) were operated on within 72 hours of the decision to operate - mean time to surgery 1.5 days (range 0-3 days). The mean time from referral to clinic was 1.33 days (range 0-6 days). 4 patients were operated on within 7 days of injury. Of the 2 patients operated on > 7 days, 1 was referred 32 days post injury and 1 failed conservative management. Conclusions The introduction of a ‘rapid-access’ musculoskeletal unit with early senior review and a dedicated theatre has created ‘gold-standard’ compliance with national standards for the operative management of closed paediatric fractures.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call