key: cord-0785233-ya2wwnx0 authors: nan title: COVID-19-related absence among surgeons: development of an international surgical workforce prediction model date: 2020-12-28 journal: BJS Open DOI: 10.1093/bjsopen/zraa021 sha: e3178d436c8f45967f2835cf59d77a18a646222c doc_id: 785233 cord_uid: ya2wwnx0 BACKGROUND: During the initial COVID-19 outbreak up to 28.4 million elective operations were cancelled worldwide, in part owing to concerns that it would be unsustainable to maintain elective surgery capacity because of COVID-19-related surgeon absence. Although many hospitals are now recovering, surgical teams need strategies to prepare for future outbreaks. This study aimed to develop a framework to predict elective surgery capacity during future COVID-19 outbreaks. METHODS: An international cross-sectional study determined real-world COVID-19-related absence rates among surgeons. COVID-19-related absences included sickness, self-isolation, shielding, and caring for family. To estimate elective surgical capacity during future outbreaks, an expert elicitation study was undertaken with senior surgeons to determine the minimum surgical staff required to provide surgical services while maintaining a range of elective surgery volumes (0, 25, 50 or 75 per cent). RESULTS: Based on data from 364 hospitals across 65 countries, the COVID-19-related absence rate during the initial 6 weeks of the outbreak ranged from 20.5 to 24.7 per cent (mean average fortnightly). In weeks 7–12, this decreased to 9.2–13.8 per cent. At all times during the COVID-19 outbreak there was predicted to be sufficient surgical staff available to maintain at least 75 per cent of regular elective surgical volume. Overall, there was predicted capacity for surgeon redeployment to support the wider hospital response to COVID-19. CONCLUSION: This framework will inform elective surgical service planning during future COVID-19 outbreaks. In most settings, surgeon absence is unlikely to be the factor limiting elective surgery capacity. The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on elective surgical care. A global scale projection estimated that 28.4 million elective operations will be cancelled during initial COVID-19 outbreaks 1 . Perioperative COVID-19 is associated with significantly increased morbidity and mortality 2,3 , so routine operations have been postponed, avoiding patients being exposed to the risk of in-hospital SARS-CoV-2 infection [4] [5] [6] . Hospitals have also cancelled elective operations to release critical care capacity for patients with COVID-19, and surgeons have been redeployed to support the hospital response in other areas, including critical care, acute medicine, and emergency departments 6,7 . Surgeons may be at increased risk of SARS-CoV-2 exposure and illness because of aerosolization in surgical smoke and contaminated tissues 5, [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] . In addition to COVID-19 sickness, some surgeons may need to self-isolate, shield, or take care of family members, further depleting staffing of surgical services 15, 16 . Orthopaedic teams from China have reported sickness rates of up to 20 per cent. A large-scale multispecialty international assessment of surgeon sickness rates during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has not been undertaken previously. Many hospitals are now recovering from the initial impact of COVID-19, but future outbreaks are likely to happen 17 . To avoid growing backlogs of postponed operations, surgical services must plan to provide sufficient staff to be able to maintain elective surgery during upcoming outbreaks. This study aimed to determine the COVID-19-related absence rate among surgeons, and to develop a framework for predicting workforce capacity needed for elective surgery capacity during future COVID-19 outbreaks. The methodology is summarized in Fig. 1 . First, an international, multispecialty, cross-sectional study was completed to determine COVID-19-related absence rates. Second, an expert elicitation study was undertaken with senior surgeons to determine the minimum staff required to provide surgical services across a range of scenarios. This informed the development of a framework to predict the number of staff needed to support elective Received: July 13, 2020. Accepted: September 9, 2020 V C The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com surgery capacity during future outbreaks in a range of scenarios. Data were collected using REDCap, a secure, web-based electronic data capture tool, hosted at the University of Birmingham (Birmingham, UK). Surgeons were invited to participate in a cross-sectional study of COVID-19-related absences through the international, multispecialty COVIDSurg research network's e-mail list and social media platforms (Twitter: @CovidSurg; Instagram: @CovidSurg). The surgeons were invited to participate in an online survey that was open from 25 March 2020 to 15 April 2020. Surgeons across all surgical specialties in any country affected by a COVID-19 outbreak were eligible to participate. Surgeons were defined as medical doctors with any level of training whose main clinical activity was within a surgical department. This included junior doctors in training, non-training grade doctors, and senior surgeons (consultant or attending surgeons). Participants were asked to report the COVID-19-related absence rate for their current surgical team at the time of survey completion. COVID-19-related absence was defined as inability to attend work activities owing to: sickness (COVID-19 symptoms with or without a confirmatory swab test); or other COVID-19 related absence, including self-isolation after recent contact with a person known to have COVID-19, shielding owing to pregnancy or a pre-existing medical condition, or care of sick or dependent family members. The participants were asked to report surgeon sickness rates and other COVID-19-related absence rates, as defined above. Total surgeon absence rate within teams was obtained by summing the two figures. Participants were also asked to classify their hospital as: currently treating patients with suspected COVID-19; previously (but not currently) having treated patients with COVID-19; or never having treated patients with COVID-19. Hospitals that were currently treating patients with suspected COVID-19 were further classified by CRITCON level 18 . CRITCON assesses hospital capacity, strain the hospital is under, and resource availability; an increase in CRITCON level indicates escalating systemic stress in the hospital (level 0, business as usual; level 1, normal winter; level 2, unprecedented; level 3, full stretch; level 4, emergency) ( Table S1) . Responses from different surgical specialty teams within a particular hospital were treated as independent data inputs (independent responses), as they represented separate team structures, often with different sized teams. If the same surgical team submitted multiple responses within a 14-day period, the reported absence rates were averaged and the response date was considered to be the midpoint between response dates. If there were multiple responses submitted from the same team more than 14 days apart, these were treated as separate data inputs to allow any changes in COVID-19-related absence rates to be captured as the outbreak progressed. A detailed flow chart describing this methodology can be found in Fig. S1 . Invalid and incomplete responses were excluded at the beginning of the analysis. A response was considered incomplete if there were no data on absence rates, country or date of response (as these data were needed to define the time since local emergence of the outbreak). A response was excluded as invalid if the reported absence rates exceeded 100 per cent, as this would indicate an error in data entry. The interval from the first COVID-19 case in the local community until the time of the participants' response was determined. To calculate this, the date of local COVID-19 emergence was recorded at the lowest possible administrative level (city, region, country) ( basis of their experience of managing surgical services. A structured elicitation exercise was undertaken, with the experts asked to estimate the minimum number of surgeons needed to maintain surgical services across 12 scenarios. These scenarios were based on three different sizes of surgical service (small, total 20 surgeons on staff; medium, total 35 surgeons; large, total 50 surgeons), and on maintaining four different levels of regular elective surgical volume during the COVID-19 outbreak (0, 25, 50 or 75 per cent of regular elective surgical volume continued). Minimum surgical services included emergency surgery duties the surgeons would normally undertake, as well as the ongoing elective surgical activities within the different scenarios presented. The questions answered by the expert surgeons for this elicitation exercise are available in Appendix S2. The estimates of COVID-19 absence rates from the crosssectional study were benchmarked against the minimum staffing requirements from the expert elicitation exercise, to develop a framework for predicting the availability of staff for elective surgery capacity throughout COVID-19 outbreaks (Fig. 1) . The framework was stratified by surgical service size, level of regular elective surgical volume during the COVID-19 outbreak, and time since local COVID-19 emergence. The framework included the following components. Reported mean average rates of COVID-19-related absence were mapped on to the three surgical team sizes to estimate the number of surgeons away from work because of COVID-19. A further 10 per cent of the total number of available surgeons was subtracted to account for baseline work absence (sick leave for disease other than COVID-19, annual leave, all other reasons for absence regardless of the pandemic) 19 . The experts were presented with three surgical service sizes (20, 35 or 50 surgeon staff) and a range of ongoing elective activity (0, 25, 50 or 75 per cent) and asked to provide the minimum number of surgeons required to sustain services in each scenario. The mean average from the expert elicitation for each scenario was taken for use in the model. The number of surgeons within each size of surgical service available to attend work was calculated by taking the baseline surgical service size and subtracting the number of surgeons absent owing to COVID-19 and the number of absent for non-COVID-19related reasons. The number of surgeons available for redeployment was defined as number of surgeons available to work but not required to maintain the surgical service, and therefore available for redeployment to another part of the hospital. This was determined by subtracting the minimum number of surgeons required to run the surgical services from the total number of surgeons available to work. A sensitivity analysis of hospitals at CRITCON level 2 or greater was performed to understand the behaviour of the prediction model in hospitals where critical care capacity is reduced (unprecedented levels, full stretch or last resource). Differences in COVID-19-related absence rates between different COVID-19 hospital status groups and across CRITCON levels were assessed using linear regression models, with two-sided P < 0.050 considered statistically significant. Analyses were conducted using Stata V R version 16.0 (StataCorp, College Station, Texas, USA). There were a total of 451 data inputs (Fig. S1 ). Data were captured across 364 hospitals and 65 countries (Table S3) . A total of 13 surgical specialties contributed to the study: colorectal surgery, acute-care surgery, upper gastrointestinal and hepatobiliary, orthopaedics, paediatric surgery, otolaryngology and head and neck, vascular, obstetrics and gynaecology, urology, plastic surgery, neurosurgery, cardiothoracic, and maxillofacial and oral surgery. Overall, 61 responses (13.5 per cent) were from hospitals that had not admitted patients with COVID-19, 329 (72.9 per cent ) were from hospitals currently treating patients with COVID-19, and 60 (13.3 per cent) were from hospitals that had previously treated COVID-19 but did not have patients with COVID-19 at the time of response. Of 329 hospitals currently treating patients COVID-19, 236 (71.7) were at CRITCON levels of unprecedented critical care demand or worse (levels 2-4). Over the first 6 weeks of outbreaks, the fortnightly averaged COVID-19-related absence rates ranged from 20.5 to 24.7 per cent (Fig. 2) . This decreased to 9.2-13.8 per cent during weeks 7-12. Both surgeon absence owing to sickness and other COVID-19related reasons followed a similar trend (Table S4) . Absence rates among senior surgeons were mildly higher than those in junior surgeons but followed the same upward trend in the first 6 weeks, with a decrease thereafter (Table S5) . COVID-19-related absence rates were broadly consistent across countries when stratified by time since local COVID-19 emergence (Table S6) . No significant difference was found in absence rates between hospitals currently treating COVID-19 and those not currently treating patients with COVID-19. Among hospitals currently treating COVID-19, there was no statistically significant difference in COVID-19-related absence rates between CRITCON levels (P ¼ 0.814) ( Table S7 ). The COVID-19-related absence rate was 18.0 (95 per cent c.i. 14. Of surgeons invited to participate in the expert elicitation exercise, all 22 responded. Experts represented 12 countries (Table S3) and eight surgical specialties (colorectal surgery, acute-care surgery, paediatric surgery, upper gastrointestinal/hepatic surgery, orthopaedics, cardiothoracic, maxillofacial and oral surgery, and general surgery). Depending on the elective surgical volume, the minimum number of surgeons required was determined as 6-12 in small surgical services, 9-20 in medium surgical services, and 12-26 in large surgical services. Considering real-world absence rates, across small, medium, and large surgical services there would be sufficient staffing available to maintain at least 75 per cent of regular elective surgical volume at all points throughout future COVID-19 outbreaks. In addition, there would potentially be surgeons available for redeployment across most of the scenarios ( Table 1) . A sensitivity analysis was performed for hospitals at CRITCON level 2 or greater, with similar findings in terms of surgeon absence and availability (Table S8 ). This study presents a framework for prediction of elective surgical capacity during COVID-19 outbreaks. It demonstrates that, taking into account COVID-19-related absences, sufficient workforce capacity within surgical services remains to deliver at least 75 per cent of regular elective surgical volume during COVID-19 outbreaks. There is also scope for redeployment of surgeons to contribute to the wider hospital response. An estimated 28.4 million elective operations have been cancelled owing to COVID-19 1 , including 5.3 million in Europe and Central Asia, and 4.5 million in North America. Although this was an appropriate response during the initial COVID-19 impact, it is not a sustainable approach during future outbreaks. To prevent a deterioration in population health, safe elective surgery must continue during future COVID-19 outbreaks. The framework presented can be used for surgical teams to plan their elective activities, using their own team size and the available human resources. Infrastructure availability (such as operating theatre and ward space) and patient-level risk also need to be considered when deciding the volume of elective surgery to be maintained in upcoming surges. Surgeons' absence rates varied as the outbreak progressed, following a similar pattern to the expected number of cases in communities throughout an outbreak 21 . However, absence rates did not correlate with the level of strain on hospital resources and bed capacity, as measured by CRITCON. A variety of factors can influence staff infection rates at particular time points, such as testing policies or staff protection strategies. Additionally, the CRITCON grading system was created for UK hospitals and might be difficult to apply to a broad range of countries. Hospitals that were no longer admitting patients with COVID-19 still experienced surgeon absence, suggesting that SARS-CoV-2 transmission in the community might be one of the main drivers of surgeons' sickness. Furthermore, during the majority of the outbreak (first 10 weeks), the proportion of surgeons absent owing to isolation, shielding, and family care was higher than the proportion sick with COVID-19 (Table S4) . Future recommendations regarding staff selection for testing and the ideal length of isolation could influence work absence 22 . Emerging evidence of antibody testing may allow more surgeons to be available safely, but further evidence is needed regarding reinfection rates 23 . This study had limitations. First, sickness and absence rates might have been affected by factors not assessed in this study. Specific measures to mitigate SARS-CoV-2 spread were not reported, and could have influenced absence rates, both for sickness prevalence (such as social distancing measures), isolation rates (testing availability) and family care (national or local lockdown forcing active adults to take care of dependents). Team management strategies already in place were not collected, and might have influenced absence rates, such as rota adaptations, workforce redistributions, and 'hot' and 'cold' units. Second, the minimum number of surgeons needed might have been influenced by experts' backgrounds, such as specialty, whether they work in a high-or low-income country, and whether they work in a central versus district hospital. The way that emergency volume was factored in was not fixed, and this might have been underestimated by surgeons working in teams where elective procedures make up the majority of the work (for example in cancer centres) and overestimated in hospitals where emergency surgery is the predominant activity (such as trauma centres). The framework developed in this study is a starting point for surgical team management during future outbreaks. Decisions regarding maintaining elective surgery should take into consideration the available surgical staff but also hospital resource use, particularly theatre space and critical care capacity. Different surgical specialties might be able to cope differently with surgeon absence; for example, an ophthalmology service may be able to accommodate more absenteeism without effecting surgical volume than a hepatobiliary surgery service. In addition, selection of Staff at work based on baseline team size, accounting for absence rates 0-2 weeks 2-4 weeks 4-6 weeks 6-8 weeks 8-10 weeks 10-12 weeks Small (n ¼ 20) 25 12 Staff at work 14 13 13 15 15 16 Available for redeployment* 2 1 1 3 3 4 50 10 Staff at work 14 13 13 15 15 16 Available for redeployment* 4 3 3 5 5 6 75 8 Staff at work 14 13 13 15 15 16 Available for redeployment* 6 5 5 staff for redeployment to support other departments should take into consideration the different roles of junior and senior doctors within surgical teams. This prediction model is a guide, and its application should be tailored according to local resources and service needs. These may vary based on staff demographics (older surgeons are more likely to self-isolate), emergency surgery workload, and surgical specialty. 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WHO Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Dashboard. https:// covid19.who.int Developing antibody tests for SARS-CoV-2 Development and clinical application of a rapid IgM-IgG combined antibody test for SARS-CoV-2 infection diagnosis Disclosure. The authors declare no conflict of interest. The expert consultant group was asked to provide the minimum number of surgeons needed for different sized teams (small, 20; medium, 35; large, 50) when there was a 25, 50, 75 or 100 per cent elective surgery cancellation rate. The minimum number of surgeons was applied to the team sizes reported by respondents and was rounded up to prevent underestimation. *Number of surgeons available for redeployment from each team ¼ baseline team -(surgeons absent owing to COVID-19 þ surgeons absent for other reasons (vacation, childcare, and all other reasons factored as 10 per cent)) -minimum number of surgeons needed per team. Surgeon absence for other reasons included not only COVID-19-related reasons such as shielding, self-isolation or care for sick dependents, but also baseline absence rates reported by Gianino et al. 19 . The 10 per cent baseline absence rates include other vacation leave, childcare, and sick leave for reasons other than COVID. This is compliant with the 1.4 per cent sickness leave rates reported by the National Health Service for February 2020 20 . Supplementary material is available at BJS Open online.