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General Orthopaedics

ORTHOPAEDIC TRAUMA EMERGENCIES DONE AFTER HOURS

The South African Orthopaedic Association (SAOA) September 2023 Meeting, Cape Town, South Africa, 4–7 September 2023.



Abstract

In 2019, the incidence of fractures were 178 million globally, South Africa accounting for close to 600 000 of these fractures, an 18.53% increase since 1990. South Africa does not have the public infrastructure to adequately facilitate the optimal surgical management of this burden. This forces intensive labour practices among orthopaedic surgeons, often performing complex surgeries throughout the night. There is a direct correlation between “after-hour”operations and the increase in morbidities.

A retrospective review of the orthopaedic surgical cases and orthopaedic surgical emergencies done at a tertiary institution in Johannesburg between 8th of August 2021 to 12th December 2022. The nature of the orthopaedic interventions, the date of booking of the surgical procedures, date of surgical procedures, as well as start and end time of the orthopaedic interventions were analysed.

“After-Hours” orthopaedic interventions were defined as interventions done between 16:00 and 07:00. Orthopaedic emergencies were defined as: Open fracture debridements, external Fixator insertion, arthrotomies, fasciotomies and the insertion of steinmann pins. 1483 (27.92%) of 5310 operative cases done on the emergency board were orthopaedic cases. 1098 (74.04%) hardware-related cases and 535 (36.08%) orthopaedic emergencies were done. 854 (57.58%) cases were done “After-Hours” of which 433 (29.20%) cases were done during “Dead-Hours” (23:00–07:00). Of these 433 cases, only 173 (39.95%) were true orthopaedic emergencies.

Although the proportion of emergencies done after hours were greater than during working hours, there is still a large proportion of intricate orthopaedic cases done between 16:00– 07:00 that should not be prioritized, due to an associated higher morbidity. Enhanced strategic planning is advisable in future in order to prioritize complex hardware cases during working hours, and due to the burden, prioritize minor relooks and simple skin- grafts for the latter aspects of the night. A dedicated Orthopaedic Trauma theatre is recommended.


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