Abstract
Abstract Introduction General surgical patients who require emergency surgery should have timely access to operating theatre to ensure optimal outcomes. It is important to evaluate delays to identify contributing elements and help to improve standards of surgical care. The decision to incision time interval is a benchmark used in obstetric practice. This study aimed to assess the use of this time interval in the emergency general surgical setting to consider whether the principle may be translatable. Methods Prospective data were collected on patients undergoing emergency general surgery in a tertiary care centre over four weeks. Data were extracted from patient notes and anonymised for statistical analysis. Results No statistically significant associations were found with the studied variables and decision to incision time. However, this study identified clear delays, with 66% of emergency operations taking place after target time assigned by NCEPOD classification. It identified trends in varying decision to incision time in patient and procedure type. It also identified issues with documentation and an association between longer decision to incision time and post-operative length of stay. Conclusion This study highlights important delays in emergency general surgery. Decision to incision time reveals important trends and, with larger sample sizes, may identify areas which hinder time-sensitive procedures. This study recommends that decision time could be more formally incorporated into surgical documentation to better monitor delays. The findings of this study could inform future research, which is required to determine the true potential of using decision to incision time interval in emergency general surgery.
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