Introduction The COVID-19 pandemic has put significant stress on healthcare systems globally. This study focuses on emergency general surgery services at a major trauma centre and teaching hospital. We aimed to identify whether the number of patients and the severity of their presentation has significantly changed since the implementation of a national lockdown. Materials and methods This study is a retrospective review of acute referrals (from general practice and accident and emergency) to the emergency general surgery team over a 14-day period before (group 1) and during (group 2) lockdown. Results A total of 151 patients were reviewed by the general surgical team in group 1 and 75 in group 2 (a 50.3% reduction). The number of days with symptoms prior to presentation was significantly shorter in group 1 compared with group 2 (3 vs 4, p = 0.04). There was no significant difference in the National Early Warning Score, white blood cell count, lymphocytes and C-reactive protein on admission between the two groups of patients. There were significantly fewer patients admitted after lockdown compared with pre-lockdown (66% vs 48%, p = 0.01). Length of hospital stay was significantly shorter during lockdown compared with pre-lockdown (5 days vs 4 days, p = 0.04). Conclusion Fewer patients were referred and admitted during lockdown compared with pre-lockdown, and the length of stay was also significantly reduced. There was also a delay in presentation to hospital, although these patients were not more unwell based on the scoring criteria used within this study.
Addresses the evolving advice and guidance from leading government dental bodies affecting the profession. Provides a working example for setting up and developing an urgent dental care centre. Discusses the current and future challenges likely to face the profession amid this international crisis.
Conscious sedation is a useful adjunct in oral surgery due to the invasive nature of procedures and the prevalence of dental anxiety in the general population. The most common conscious sedation technique used in the UK is intravenous sedation with a single drug, midazolam, which has an excellent record of safety. This paper gives an overview of areas to consider when planning oral surgery procedures in primary care under intravenous sedation with midazolam, to enhance success and patient safety. The fundamentals of providing safe sedation include careful patient assessment, patient preparation, a good understanding of the complexity of treatment, and an appropriately trained team. This paper also reviews the current guidance on conscious sedation in the UK, the governance of sedation in dentistry, the medications used, and training of the sedation team.
As primary care dental services continue to offer conscious sedation in practice, this article presents the findings from a record-keeping audit carried out at a dental teaching hospital in the UK. National guidance was used to set out the gold standards for record-keeping. Various shortcomings in terms of documentation were identified. This article enables dental practitioners involved in dental sedation to review their own sedation record-keeping to meet current national standards and ultimately improve clinical practice and the quality of patient care.
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