The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the provision of orthopaedic care across the UK. During the pandemic orthopaedic specialist registrars were redeployed to “frontline” specialties occupying non-surgical roles. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on orthopaedic training in the UK is unknown. This paper sought to examine the role of orthopaedic trainees during the COVID-19 and the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on postgraduate orthopaedic education. A 42-point questionnaire was designed, validated, and disseminated via e-mail and an instant-messaging platform.Aims
Methods
Elevated fat pads on a paediatric elbow radiograph may represent an intraarticular fracture. If no obvious fracture is visible, the injury may be treated with a collar and cuff until discomfort resolves. In some centres these patients are discharged directly from A&E, easing the load on fracture clinics and reducing the number of visits required by the patient. A retrospective study was carried out to review patient journey for children referred to clinic with elevated fat pads only and to investigate whether such a protocol could be established locally. Notes for all children attending fracture clinic in May 2018 were reviewed. X-rays for patients with any elbow injury were then reviewed. Patients with raised fat pads only were included in the study. Outcome following clinic review was recorded. 818 patients (315 new referrals) attended 15 clinics. 31 were referred with raised fat pads only. Mean age was 7.7 years with mean time to clinic of 4 days. 74.2% required no further treatment and were discharged at first clinic appointment. 8 patients were kept in cast for another 1–2 weeks due to parental apprehension, patient apprehension or patient being uncomfortable without cast. None of our patients required surgical intervention or re-attended following discharge. This study showed that patients with raised fat pads only can be treated with collar and cuff, analgesia and discharged from A&E with an advice leaflet. This would reduce the number of patients unnecessarily attending clinics thereby reducing patient distress and enabling more efficient use of clinic appointments.
Frail patients with neck of femur fracture, amongst other medical problems, are frequently fast-tracked to orthopaedic wards to meet government A&E waiting time targets. This is a second cycle of audit since 2008 examining the safety of fast-tracking following individual critical incidents. Data was collected prospectively between March and June 2011 by the first on-call orthopaedic doctor. 56 patients (12 male), average age 81.2y (50–97) were fast tracked. 52 were correctly referred as intra/extracapsular fracture, however 4 did not have a neck of femur fracture. 9 patients were transferred with no verbal referral to the receiving orthopaedic doctor. On arrival to the ward, 8 patients were found to have abnormal observations and acute medical problems requiring immediate review from the physicians. There were a total of 150 omissions from a total of 456 points from the fast track protocol. Vital observations of patients fast-tracked after 2100h were worse (MEWS range 0 to 11) when compared with those fast-tracked prior to 2100h (MEWS range 0 to 3). This occurs at a time when medical staff support is minimal. Fast-tracking is a common practice amongst many district-general and some teaching hospitals in Scotland. These data support concerns from orthopaedic surgeons highlighting a need for more complete initial assessment and management in A&E prior to transfer to the ward. Recent evidence suggests medical optimisation of the multiple acute and chronic medical comorbidities common amongst patients with neck of femur fracture is the main facilitator of early surgery which significantly reduces post-operative mortality.