Racial and ethnic variation in emergent surgical care and outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic: post hoc analysis of an EAST MCT

ObjectivesThe COVID-19 pandemic highlighted concerns regarding the equity of medical care. We evaluated associations between race/ethnicity, timing of hospital presentation and outcomes of acute appendicitis (AP) and acute cholecystitis (AC) during the initial pandemic peak.MethodsAnalysis was perfo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Trauma surgery & acute care open 2022-12, Vol.7 (1), p.e001023-e001023
Hauptverfasser: Winicki, Nolan M, Dahan, Alden, Maheshwari, Somiya, Crowley, Brandon, Gelbard, Rondi, Burruss, Sigrid
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ObjectivesThe COVID-19 pandemic highlighted concerns regarding the equity of medical care. We evaluated associations between race/ethnicity, timing of hospital presentation and outcomes of acute appendicitis (AP) and acute cholecystitis (AC) during the initial pandemic peak.MethodsAnalysis was performed on a prospective, observational, multicenter study of adults with AP or AC. Patients were categorized as pre-pandemic (pre-CoV: October 2019–January 2020) or during the first pandemic peak (CoV: April 2020 through 4 months following the end of local pandemic restrictions). Patient demographics, American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) imaging/pathology grade, duration of symptoms before triage, time from triage to intervention and hospital length of stay were collected.ResultsA total of 2165 patients (1496 pre-CoV, 669 CoV) were included from 19 centers. Asian and Hispanic patients with AC had a longer duration of symptoms prior to presentation during CoV than pre-CoV (100.6 hours vs 37.5 hours, p
ISSN:2397-5776
2397-5776
DOI:10.1136/tsaco-2022-001023