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- Title
Outpatient Total Thyroidectomy Is Safe for Moderate-Volume Surgeons.
- Authors
Black, Jonathan; Cotton, Travis; Jen Jen Yeh
- Abstract
Traditionally, total thyroidectomy (TT) was an inpatient procedure, but recent trends indicate that patients are often discharged on the day of surgery. This has been proven safe for high-volume surgeons but has not been studied for low (<10 TT per year) andmoderate volume surgeons (<24 TT per year). Retrospective review was performed for 414 total thyroidectomies between 2005 and 2013. Emergency department visits and readmissions within 30 days of surgery were captured, but were considered the same for the purpose of this analysis. Patientswere identified as outpatient if the day of discharge matched the day of surgery. The groups were compared based on demographic variables, comorbidities, postop calciumsupplementation, and serumcalcium.We found that moderatevolume surgeons were more likely to perform outpatient TT than low-volume surgeons (31.6% vs 6.0%, P < 0.001), but there was no correlation between length of stay and readmission (P = 0.688). Readmitted patients had lower postop serum calcium (8.3 mg/dL) than patients who were not readmitted (8.8 mg/dL, P = 0.006). Our data show that moderate-volume surgeons performing outpatient TT have an acceptable safety profile with respect to emergency department visits and hospital readmissions, and that same day discharge had no bearing on readmission.
- Subjects
THYROIDECTOMY; OUTPATIENT medical care; CALCIUM; ENDOCRINE surgery; PATIENT readmissions
- Publication
American Surgeon, 2017, Vol 83, Issue 7, p750
- ISSN
0003-1348
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/000313481708300733