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Relationship between surgeon volume and outcomes: a systematic review of systematic reviews
by
Morche, Johannes
, Mathes, Tim
, Pieper, Dawid
in
Bibliographic data bases
/ Biomedicine
/ Breast cancer
/ Cancer surgery
/ Clinical outcomes
/ Colorectal cancer
/ Evidence-based medicine
/ Gastrointestinal surgery
/ Health Sciences
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mortality
/ Outcome Assessment, Health Care
/ Patient Safety
/ Quality
/ Quality control
/ Quality of Health Care
/ Statistical significance
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Surgeons
/ Surgical Procedures, Operative - mortality
/ Surgical Procedures, Operative - statistics & numerical data
/ Survival analysis
/ Systematic review
/ Technological change
2016
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Relationship between surgeon volume and outcomes: a systematic review of systematic reviews
by
Morche, Johannes
, Mathes, Tim
, Pieper, Dawid
in
Bibliographic data bases
/ Biomedicine
/ Breast cancer
/ Cancer surgery
/ Clinical outcomes
/ Colorectal cancer
/ Evidence-based medicine
/ Gastrointestinal surgery
/ Health Sciences
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mortality
/ Outcome Assessment, Health Care
/ Patient Safety
/ Quality
/ Quality control
/ Quality of Health Care
/ Statistical significance
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Surgeons
/ Surgical Procedures, Operative - mortality
/ Surgical Procedures, Operative - statistics & numerical data
/ Survival analysis
/ Systematic review
/ Technological change
2016
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Relationship between surgeon volume and outcomes: a systematic review of systematic reviews
by
Morche, Johannes
, Mathes, Tim
, Pieper, Dawid
in
Bibliographic data bases
/ Biomedicine
/ Breast cancer
/ Cancer surgery
/ Clinical outcomes
/ Colorectal cancer
/ Evidence-based medicine
/ Gastrointestinal surgery
/ Health Sciences
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mortality
/ Outcome Assessment, Health Care
/ Patient Safety
/ Quality
/ Quality control
/ Quality of Health Care
/ Statistical significance
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Surgeons
/ Surgical Procedures, Operative - mortality
/ Surgical Procedures, Operative - statistics & numerical data
/ Survival analysis
/ Systematic review
/ Technological change
2016
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Relationship between surgeon volume and outcomes: a systematic review of systematic reviews
Journal Article
Relationship between surgeon volume and outcomes: a systematic review of systematic reviews
2016
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Overview
Background
The surgeon volume-outcome relationship has been discussed for many years and its existence or nonexistence is of importance for various reasons. A lot of empirical work has been published on it. We aimed to summarize systematic reviews in order to present current evidence.
Methods
Medline, Embase, Cochrane database of systematic reviews (CDSR), and health technology assessment websites were searched up to October 2015 for systematic reviews on the surgeon volume-outcome relationship. Reviews were critically appraised, and results were extracted and synthesized by type of surgical procedure/condition.
Results
Thirty-two reviews reporting on 15 surgical procedures/conditions were included. Methodological quality of included systematic reviews assessed with the assessment of multiple systematic reviews (AMSTAR) was generally moderate to high albeit included literature partly neglected considering methodological issues specific to volume-outcome relationship. Most reviews tend to support the presence of a surgeon volume-outcome relationship. This is most clear-cut in colorectal cancer, bariatric surgery, and breast cancer where reviews of high quality show large effects.
Conclusions
When taking into account its limitations, this overview can serve as an informational basis for decision makers. Our results seem to support a positive volume-outcome relationship for most procedures/conditions. However, forthcoming reviews should pay more attention to methodology specific to volume-outcome relationship. Due to the lack of information, any numerical recommendations for minimum volume thresholds are not possible. Further research is needed for this issue.
Publisher
BioMed Central,Springer Nature B.V
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