A time-motion study on the operating room processes among pregnant COVID-19 patients undergoing cesarean section in a tertiary government hospital
- Author:
Ma. Evita D. dela Cruz-Tabanda
1
;
Maria Angela R. Bandola
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: decision-to-delivery Interval (DDI); time and motion study
- MeSH: Pregnancy; Female; Cesarean Section; Time and Motion Studies; COVID-19; Time Perception; Motion
- From: Acta Medica Philippina 2021;55(2):224-230
- CountryPhilippines
- Language:English
- Abstract: Objective. This study aims to determine time and motion in the operating room in emergent, urgent and scheduled cesarean section surgeries among pregnant COVID-19 patients. Methodology. A time and motion performance evaluation study was done by computing the following parameters: pre-induction time, pre-incision time, opening time, closing time, for both decision-to-delivery interval (DDI) and overall operative time. Results. During the study period, emergent DDI average was 2 hours and 38 minutes, emergent overall operative time was 1 hour and 31 minutes, urgent DDI average was 3 hours and 51 minutes, and urgent overall operative time of 1 hour and 57 minutes. However, in both urgent and emergent cases, the recommended DDI of 30 minutes, and the average duration of 44.3 minutes for CS were not feasible. Conclusion. The COVID-19 pandemic has negatively affected the provision of surgical obstetric care and OR utilization. Due to the new safety protocol for healthcare workers and patients, there was a significant delay in DDI and overall operative time. The causes were preparation, anesthesia factors or obstetrician factors. Identifying modifiable obstacles may improve the DDI, overall operative time, and the quality of maternal and child birth care during this pandemic.
- Full text:2797-Article Text-24448-1-10-20210428.pdf