RT @xtofero: It is. Norwegian liver surgery has been centralized to five uni hospitals for over a decade: volumes medium-very high. Complet…
RT @xtofero: It is. Norwegian liver surgery has been centralized to five uni hospitals for over a decade: volumes medium-very high. Complet…
It is. Norwegian liver surgery has been centralized to five uni hospitals for over a decade: volumes medium-very high. Complete national cohort: 8.3 resections/100.000 inhabitants/yr; overall 90D mortality all major resections 4.3 % https://t.co/e7b3LJP3Hd
Norwegian results (centralized liver surgery) for comparison: https://t.co/8abjSo9Bbv @hpb_so #SoMe4HPB
RT @ksoreide: and here are the data from Norway, covering 5 centers doing liver surgery: lap vs open, minor vs major, https://t.co/K6Saxb9p…
RT @ksoreide: and here are the data from Norway, covering 5 centers doing liver surgery: lap vs open, minor vs major, https://t.co/K6Saxb9p…
RT @ksoreide: and here are the data from Norway, covering 5 centers doing liver surgery: lap vs open, minor vs major, https://t.co/K6Saxb9p…
RT @ksoreide: and here are the data from Norway, covering 5 centers doing liver surgery: lap vs open, minor vs major, https://t.co/K6Saxb9p…
Fantastic resource and very informative. What is interesting about the Japanese data is the huge number of centres doing liver resections. The impact of centre volume on outcomes has not been evaluated yet.
and here are the data from Norway, covering 5 centers doing liver surgery: lap vs open, minor vs major, https://t.co/K6Saxb9pbZ @LAOS1860 @xtofero @hpb_so @EAHPBA small numbers in comparison, but complete for the entire population
In a national cohort, laparoscopy is used for a substantial proportion of minor resections and was associated with reduced aggregated length of stay Risk factors for reoperation and mortality were male gender, increased age. https://t.co/oXCwXwoIIj