30-day postoperative mortality and the effects of hospital preparedness during the COVID-19 pandemic: a pooled analysis of prospective international cohort studies
Dmitri Nepogodiev, Dmitri Nepogodiev, Sivesh K Kamarajah, Aneel Bhangu, Radhika Aacharya, Waheed-Ul-Rahman Ahmed, Ehab ElAmeer, Ruth Blanco-Colino, Muhammed Elhadi, Dhruva Ghosh, James C Glasbey, Arda Isik, Kate Jolly, Haytham Kaafarani, Bryar Kadir, Hans Lederhuber

TL;DR
This study found that postoperative mortality decreased during the pandemic and was lower in better-prepared hospitals, suggesting improved pandemic planning could save lives.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence linking hospital preparedness to reduced postoperative mortality during the pandemic.
Findings
Postoperative mortality decreased from 18.4% in early 2020 to 5.8% by late 2022.
Hospitals with higher preparedness scores had significantly lower mortality rates.
Vaccinated patients had lower mortality compared to unvaccinated patients in the final pandemic period.
Abstract
Surgical services were poorly prepared for the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to widescale disruption to elective activity. This study aimed to identify actionable priorities to strengthen pandemic preparedness of surgical and hospital systems. This study pooled data from three international, prospective cohort studies including patients who had a positive SARS-CoV-2 test result in the seven days before or within 30 days after surgery. Patients were included across four pandemic time periods: Period 1 (January–May 2020), Period 2 (June–July 2020), Period 3 (October 2020), and Period 4 (December–March 2022). The primary outcome measure was 30-day postoperative mortality. Hierarchical logistic regression models were developed to explore association between pandemic periods (primary analysis) and hospital-level preparedness (secondary analysis) on 30-day postoperative mortality. Hospital…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and healthcare impacts · Disaster Response and Management · Infection Control and Ventilation
