You can cancel the surgery, but if you decide you want surgery again, you will be back at the bottom of the waiting list. It's better to let the staff know early tomorrow if you are cancelling so they can book another patient in.
Results. Across 11 surgical specialties, 2933 of 20 881 surgeries (14.0%) were cancelled and of these, 2448 (83.5%) were for administrative or structural reasons. Compared with the data collected previously for general, gynecological and urological procedures, cancellation rates increased from 8.1% to 11.8%.
Table 1. Reasons of cancellationCancellation% Lack of operating room time 59.7% Medical Reasons of the patient 10.8% Patient did not turned up 16.2% Change in surgical plan 5.4%2 more rows
Why would a doctor cancel your surgery at preop? You are sick. (fevers, pneumonia, etc) High blood pressure. Abnormal labs. New information which shows increased risk. Medications which affect bleeding or anesthesia taken too close to surgery.
If the cancellation occurred after the procedure was commenced, and was truly unavoidable, such as the patient developing an arrythmia after anesthesia was induced or the patient developing unrelenting hypotension when the femoral catheter was placed, then it is appropriate to bill the inpatient admission.
The Cancellation List is used to record patients requesting short-notice appointments. These appointments usually become available as a result of another patient cancelling an appointment.
Contact the hospital directly You can book, cancel or change a hospital appointment by contacting a hospital directly by phone or through their website.
Cancellations may occur due to scheduling errors, inadequate preoperative evaluation, inadequate patient preparation, lack of surgical linen, equipment shortage, non-availability of the trained staff etc.
Why would a doctor cancel your surgery at preop? You are sick. (fevers, pneumonia, etc) High blood pressure. Abnormal labs. New information which shows increased risk. Medications which affect bleeding or anesthesia taken too close to surgery.