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Operating room efficiency and cost reduction in shoulder arthroplasty: is there an advantage of a dedicated operating room team?

Authors :
Temilola Majekodunmi
Tanner Lines
Eddie Y. Lo
Randy Volkmer
Sumant G. Krishnan
Joshua S. Bowler
Christopher Melton
Source :
Seminars in Arthroplasty: JSES. 31:125-130
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction Operating room (OR) efficiency is a crucial component in the delivery of high quality, cost-efficient healthcare in orthopedic shoulder arthroplasty, and generally in surgery. Utilizing a dedicated OR team may lead to higher clinical efficiency by potentially reducing total OR time and cost while avoiding operational redundancies or errors. The purpose of this study is to identify specific parameters influencing OR efficiency with a 2-roomed system with dedicated OR staff and evaluate its influence on operational cost of the OR per min. Methods From 2017 to 2018, 348 patients underwent primary shoulder arthroplasty at one institution, that had 2 established OR systems: A traditional “1-room” system (TS) with general OR staff, and a “2-room” shoulder service (SS) with a dedicated OR team. Medical health records were accessed to obtain pertinent study data, which included demographics, surgical indication, and time-points per surgical case. Anesthesia preparatory time (APT) was time from patient OR entry to skin incision; surgery time (ST) – from skin incision to skin closure; conclusion time (CT) – from skin closure to patient exiting OR; and turnover time (TT) – time from 1 patient's exiting to the next patient's admittance into the OR. Nonoperative time was a summation of APT, CT, and TT, while Total OR time comprised of nonoperative time and ST. Cost equivalent per minute OR operation was then used to calculate differences between the 2 interest groups. Results The SS treated 270 patients (77.6%) and TS treated 78 patients (22.4%). The SS demonstrated a 74 minutes decrease in total OR time (116 vs. 190 minutes) when compared to the TS (P Conclusion A dedicated OR team using 2 ORs improves both clinical efficiency (decreases total OR time) and reduces cost (decreases total OR cost) - despite having more staff members and associated staffing costs - compared to a traditional 1-room system. When surgeon-specific factors were removed, the largest reduction in OR cost was associated with decrease in turnover time. Level of Evidence Level III.

Details

ISSN :
10454527
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Seminars in Arthroplasty: JSES
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........037a47c6b68f8d1ea5412334124d4118