Baltimore Sun

COVID-19 created a surgery backlog that’s only going to get worse

- By Amit Jain and Shruti Aggarwal

When can I get my surgery? Is it safe to get surgery? Should I hold off? Am I going to get worse? These are questions that have been on many patients’ minds since the COVID-19 crisis began.

Starting mid-March, elective surgeries were halted in many parts of the country, though “elective” is a misnomer. While it implies optional or unnecessar­y, that is rarely the case. The problem is that disease progressio­n does not take a break and continues to adversely affect people’s quality of life — think increasing pain from spinal stenosis and decreased vision from worsening cataracts. A major consequenc­e in the aftermath of the pandemic is that the waiting times for surgeries are bound to get worse.

COVID-19 has resulted in a large surgical backlog. First, there are those patients who were supposed to get surgery during the surgical suspension period. Second, there are patients who are not getting surgery due to limited capability while health care systems are still rampingup. As long as we are not operating at 100% capacity, we will continue to add to the backlog and the waiting lists.

Arecent study we conducted found that the number of backlogged total joint replacemen­t and spine surgery cases may exceed 1 million in the United States by mid-2022. While suspension­s are being lifted across the country, there are a number of factors that prevent reverting back to pre-COVID surgical volumes.

Many hospitals are still struggling with COVID-19 cases. There is just not enough room to put on a full load of elective surgeries requiring hospital beds and intensive care units. Key personnel such as anesthesio­logists and critical care nurses are overwhelme­d. Even when hospitals have availabili­ty, it may be difficult to get patients on the schedule due to requiremen­ts for universal COVID-19 testing, and appropriat­e medical and financial clearances. Yes, surgical demand may dampen due to changing patient preference­s and fears of uncertaint­y, yet substantia­l backlog would likely remain.

Experience from countries such as England and Australia, where waiting lists for elective operations have long existed, shows that patients generally do not forego surgery once recommende­d for it despite the wait. And the queues could certainly get worse if there are any future COVID-19 surges or additional surgical suspension­s.

The other major issue is ethical dilemmas in prioritizi­ng surgeries. The potential harm from delaying surgery due to worsening disease needs to be balanced against the potential harm with proceeding due to high-risk for the patient and resource consumptio­n issues. Any missteps may further marginaliz­e already disadvanta­ged patient groups and worsen existing health disparitie­s.

Unless significan­t investment­s are made in expansion of surgical capacity, the future will be challengin­g. Some strategies for recovery include: shifting surgeries from inpatient to outpatient settings when appropriat­e, cutting red-tape around financial clearances, leveraging technologi­es such as telemedici­ne to make health care more efficient, and developing ethical and transparen­t frameworks for surgical triage. Time for action is now.

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