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The Ophthalmologist / Issues / 2018 / Oct / Too Old to Operate?
Anterior Segment Cataract Research & Innovations Health Economics and Policy Professional Development

Too Old to Operate?

A Canadian study asks: are older physicians an increased risk to patients during surgery?

By Phoebe Harkin 10/24/2018 1 min read

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The old adage, “with age comes wisdom,” has been put to the test by a team at Queen’s University, Ontario, Canada. In an attempt to establish whether age increases the risk of adverse surgical outcomes, researchers studied almost half a million cataract operations between 2009 and 2013 (1). Of the 416,502 participants in the study, 29.7 percent of surgeons were 81 years or older. 

“Late-career surgeons play a large role now in many areas of healthcare, including cataract surgery, which is the most common operation in most developed countries, and the average surgeon age is continuing to climb,” says Robert Campbell, Research Director at the university’s Department of Ophthalmology.

“At the same time, the overall population is continuing to age in most developed countries, creating a demand for healthcare that can’t be met by younger surgeons alone. As a result, we’re reliant on late career surgeons to provide a large portion of surgical care, and understanding how that affects quality of care is very important.”

So how did they fare? Well – really well. “Our study suggests that surgeons operating at later career stages provide high-quality, low-complication cataract surgery,” says Campbell. Later-career surgeons performed a substantial proportion of cataract operations – one third of the overall patient sample – with surgical complication rates similar to those of midcareer surgeons. “This likely stems from a few factors including that surgeons are staying up to date with technical innovations in the field and also that older surgeons are retiring at appropriate stages, before issues arise.”

Of the four individual complications, the only increase in risk concerned dropped lens fragment (0.11 percent) and suspected endophthalmitis (0.045 percent). “It’s important to note that overall complication rates were not higher among late-career surgeons,” says Campbell. “Additionally, the absolute risks of these two specific complications were very low among both groups of surgeons, and, as a result, the difference in risk between older and younger surgeons was actually very small.”

Campbell notes that, with all studies, there is a risk that associations occur just by chance – however… “Alternatively, the findings cannot rule out the possibility that some late-career surgeons may be less equipped to deal with some of the surgical challenges that lead to these specific outcomes. We’ll have to await follow up studies to understand why this association exists.”

References

  1. RJ Campbell et al., “Cataract surgical outcomes among late-career surgeons: A population-based cohort study”, JAMA Ophthalmology (2018). ePub ahead of print.

About the Author(s)

Phoebe Harkin

I’ve always loved telling stories. So much so, I decided to make a job of it. I finished a Masters in Magazine Journalism and spent three years working as a creative copywriter before itchy feet sent me (back)packing. It took seven months and 13 countries, but I’m now happily settled on The Ophthalmologist, where I’m busy getting stuck into all things eyeballs.

More Articles by Phoebe Harkin

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