Efficient operating room management is essential and requires precise surgery scheduling. We hypothesized that an estimation formula for the preparation time for anesthesia induction and surgery could be developed by incorporating anesthesia and surgical factors, as well as the 'clinical department,' into the formula. This retrospective observational study analyzed 12,528 scheduled surgical cases. A regression analysis that included the clinical department, six anesthesia factors, and five surgical factors was conducted. This analysis aimed to develop both an analytical framework and an equation for estimating the time required for both anesthesia induction and surgical preparation. Our estimation formula wielded high accuracy (R2 = 0.801). Particularly, there was only a difference of less than 3 min for surgeries under general anesthesia. In addition, modeling preparation time using "medical interventions performed in the operating room" as a factor instead of patient characteristics was found to be beneficial. It was possible to develop a highly accurate formula for estimating preparation time of anesthesia induction and surgery by analyzing the anesthesia factors and the surgical factors and incorporating the clinical department as an estimation factor. However, this study represents the development phase of the estimation formula. A multicenter study is essential to validate its generalizability and robustness across different settings before broader application.
Keywords: Anesthesia induction time; Clinical department; Optimal surgery schedule management; Surgery preparation time; Time estimation formula.
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