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Spine Surgery and COVID-19: The Influence of Practice Type on Preparedness, Response, and Economic Impact

  • Joseph A. Weiner*
  • , Peter R. Swiatek
  • , Daniel J. Johnson
  • , Philip K. Louie
  • , Garrett K. Harada
  • , Michael H. McCarthy
  • , Niccole Germscheid
  • , Jason P.Y. Cheung
  • , Marko H. Neva
  • , Mohammad El-Sharkawi
  • , Marcelo Valacco
  • , Daniel M. Sciubba
  • , Norman B. Chutkan
  • , Howard S. An
  • , Dino Samartzis
  • *Tämän työn vastaava kirjoittaja

    Tutkimustuotos: ArtikkeliTieteellinenvertaisarvioitu

    8 Sitaatiot (Scopus)

    Abstrakti

    Study Design: Cross-sectional observational cohort study. Objective: To investigate preparation, response, and economic impact of COVID-19 on private, public, academic, and privademic spine surgeons. Methods: AO Spine COVID-19 and Spine Surgeon Global Impact Survey includes domains on surgeon demographics, location of practice, type of practice, COVID-19 perceptions, institutional preparedness and response, personal and practice impact, and future perceptions. The survey was distributed by AO Spine via email to members (n = 3805). Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to identify differences between practice settings. Results: A total of 902 surgeons completed the survey. In all, 45.4% of respondents worked in an academic setting, 22.9% in privademics, 16.1% in private practice, and 15.6% in public hospitals. Academic practice setting was independently associated with performing elective and emergent spine surgeries at the time of survey distribution. A majority of surgeons reported a >75% decrease in case volume. Private practice and privademic surgeons reported losing income at a higher rate compared with academic or public surgeons. Practice setting was associated with personal protective equipment availability and economic issues as a source of stress. Conclusions: The current study indicates that practice setting affected both preparedness and response to COVID-19. Surgeons in private and privademic practices reported increased worry about the economic implications of the current crisis compared with surgeons in academic and public hospitals. COVID-19 decreased overall clinical productivity, revenue, and income. Government response to the current pandemic and preparation for future pandemics needs to be adaptable to surgeons in all practice settings.

    AlkuperäiskieliEnglanti
    Sivut249-262
    JulkaisuGlobal Spine Journal
    Vuosikerta12
    Numero2
    Varhainen verkossa julkaisun päivämäärä7 elok. 2020
    DOI - pysyväislinkit
    TilaJulkaistu - maalisk. 2022
    OKM-julkaisutyyppiA1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä

    Julkaisufoorumi-taso

    • Jufo-taso 0

    !!ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Surgery
    • Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
    • Clinical Neurology

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