@article { author = {Morgan, Catrin and Sugand, Kapil and Ashdown, Thomas and Nathoo, Nikita and Macfarlane, Robert and Dyke, Rory and Park, Chang and Aframian, Arash and Domos, Peter and Horwitz, Maxim and Sarraf, Khaled and Dattani, Rupen}, title = {Impact of the National Lockdown Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic On Upper Limb Trauma Workload in Central London: A Multi-Centre Longitudinal Observational Study During Implementation and Ease of National Lockdown}, journal = {The Archives of Bone and Joint Surgery}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {23-31}, year = {2022}, publisher = {Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Iranian Society of Knee Surgery, Arthroscopy and Sports Tramatology,Iranian Orthopaedic Association}, issn = {2345-4644}, eissn = {2345-461X}, doi = {10.22038/abjs.2021.53205.2639}, abstract = {Background: This study assessed the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on acute upper limb referrals and operative case-mix at the beginning and ease of British lockdown. Methods: A longitudinal multicentre observational cohort study was conducted for both upper limb trauma referrals and operative case-mix over a 12-week period (6 weeks from the beginning and 6 weeks from the ease of the national lockdown). Statistical analysis included median (± median absolute deviation), risk and odds ratios, and Fisher’s exact test to calculate the statistical significance, set at p ≤ 0.05. Results: There was a 158% (n = 456 vs. 177) increase in upper limb referrals and 133% (n = 91 vs. 39) increase in the operative trauma caseload at the ease of lockdown compared with its commencement. An increase in sporting injuries was demonstrated (p=0.02), specifically cycling (p=0.004, OR=2.58). A significant increase in COVID-19 testing was demonstrated during the ease of lockdown (p=0.0001) with more patients having their management changed during the early pandemic (9.6% vs. 0.7%, p=0.0001). Of these patients, 47% went on to have delayed surgery within 6 months. No patients who underwent surgery tested positive for COVID-19 infection within 14 days post-operatively and no mortalities were recorded at 30 days. Conclusion: The ease of lockdown has seen upper limb referrals and operations more than double compared to early lockdown. With no patients testing positive for COVID-19 within 14 days of the procedure, this demonstrates that having upper limb surgery during the current pandemic is safe. Level of evidence: III}, keywords = {Trauma,Coronavirus,COVID-19,Upper Limb,lockdown}, url = {https://abjs.mums.ac.ir/article_17787.html}, eprint = {https://abjs.mums.ac.ir/article_17787_e49d1806c6c3418f47dc1ef0fbba1c92.pdf} }