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Surgeon Multitasking Raises Transplant Death Risk
4 May
Summary
- Switching organ types in surgery increases patient death risk by 15%.
- Resting between procedures significantly reduces the mortality penalty.
- Experienced surgeons are less affected by task switching.
Performing consecutive transplant surgeries on different organ types increases patient mortality by 15%, according to a recent study. Researchers discovered that when surgeons switch between procedures, such as from a liver to a kidney transplant on the same day, the risk of patient death within a year rises sharply.
This significant impact, comparable to the experience gap between novice and seasoned surgeons, underscores the detrimental effects of multitasking in critical medical procedures. The study analyzed over 300,000 U.S. transplant surgeries from 2007 to 2019.
Encouragingly, recovery time can help surgeons reset. If doctors have a day off between different types of operations, the mortality penalty is substantially reduced. With two days of rest, the negative effect essentially disappears. Surgeon experience also plays a role, as more seasoned professionals are less affected by these transitions.
These findings suggest that optimizing surgical schedules by grouping similar procedures together could lead to better transplant outcomes. In situations where switching is unavoidable, prioritizing more experienced surgeons is recommended.