INTRODUCTION:
Orthopaedic trauma does not present in a linear fashion. Fluctuations in trauma volumes, after-hours surgery and surgical wait times impact orthopaedic surgeons and patients. There is little research focussing on how surgical trauma volumes change throughout the week. This study investigated the relationship between day of the week and surgical orthopaedic trauma volumes, after-hours surgery, and wait times for orthopaedic trauma patients.

METHODS:
All unscheduled surgical orthopaedic trauma cases presenting to one level I and three level IV urban adult trauma centers between 2008 and 2018 were retrospectively reviewed. Fluctuations in orthopaedic trauma volumes and amount of after-hours surgeries completed were investigated using Multivariable Poisson regression. Fluctuations in patient wait times were investigated using linear regression.

RESULTS:
Weekends were associated with increased surgical wait times (8.9%, p< 0.001) despite decreased surgical trauma volumes (9.1%, p< 0.001). Surgical orthopaedic trauma volumes were elevated on weekdays and decreased on weekends. More after-hours surgeries were performed from Thursday to Saturday with most performed on Friday night (26.6%, p< 0.001). Surgical wait times increased midweek and remained high until Saturday.

CONCLUSION:
With a lack of dedicated trauma resources on the weekend, a significant increase in after-hours surgery and surgical wait times was identified following surgical volumes peaking on Thursday and Friday. We suggest adapting resource allocation to reflect surgical volumes. Dedicated weekend orthopaedic trauma resources or an adaptable schedule during increased orthopaedic trauma have the potential to ease this bottleneck, improve patient care, and decrease hospital costs.