| Literature DB >> 22686475 |
Einar Hovlid1, Oddbjørn Bukve, Kjell Haug, Aslak Bjarne Aslaksen, Christian von Plessen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The cancellation of planned surgeries causes prolonged wait times, harm to patients, and is a waste of scarce resources. To reduce high cancellation rates in a Norwegian general hospital, the pathway for elective surgery was redesigned. The changes included earlier clinical assessment of patients, better planning and documentation systems, and increased involvement of patients in the scheduling of surgeries. This study evaluated the outcomes of this new pathway for elective surgery and explored which factors affected the outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22686475 PMCID: PMC3465216 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-12-154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Main events during the project period
| June 2007 | Decision by the board of the local health authority to increase the number of day surgeries |
| September 2007 | Report from work group suggests measures to increase day surgeries in a new day-surgery center |
| Fall 2007 | Decision by top management of the local health authority to work more systematically with quality improvement and develop a common strategy for conducting quality improvement projects |
| Establishment of a small unit to support frontline professionals in running improvement projects | |
| January 2008 | Remodeling of premises for a day-surgery center |
| February 2008 | Project groups redesign the pathway for elective surgery |
| March 3, 2008 | Opening of day-surgery center and implementation of new clinical pathway |
| April 2008 | Implementation of electronic system for scheduling and planning surgery |
| 2008-2010 | Follow-up and adaptation of interventions to sustain improvement |
Main steps of the pathway for elective surgery before and after redesign
| Before consultation at outpatient clinic | Referrals for elective surgery were sent to various departments. Each surgical department had their own lists of patients who were waiting for a consultation and surgery. | One electronic reception for all referrals for elective surgery. | Waiting list transparent across departments. More unified handling of referrals. |
| Consultation at outpatient clinic | Patients cleared for surgery were sent home without an appointment for surgery and without a medical pre-assessment. | New routine that clarified the allocation of work between surgical and anesthesia personnel with regard to clinical pre-assessment of the patient. | Earlier and improved medical pre-assessment is known to reduce cancellations. |
| Patient participation in planning date for surgery may improve patient satisfaction. Early notice of date for surgery is suggested in the literature as a factor that might reduce no-shows. | |||
| Medical pre-assessment was done the day before surgery. | |||
| Patients participate in planning the date of surgery and obtain the actual appointment while at the outpatient clinic. | |||
| Consultation at drop-in anesthesia outpatient clinic at day-surgery center | Not applicable | A new day-surgery center is created within the existing premises. | Improved information flow between surgical and anesthesia personnel may improve the quality of the clinical process. |
| Patients cleared for surgery proceed straight to the laboratory for blood sampling and medical pre-assessment at newly established drop-in anesthesia outpatient clinic at the day-surgery center. | |||
| The surgeon’s considerations are written immediately after the consultation so that anesthesia personnel have the preoperative information during the preoperative assessment. | |||
| Preparing for surgery | Letter to patient with appointment for surgery. Patient had no influence on appointment time. | Patient receives phone call from hospital 2 days prior to surgery to ensure that he is fit and ready. | Patients get a reminder of their appointment, which can reduce cancellations due to no-shows. If the patient is temporarily ill, then there is time to call a new patient and avoid a cancellation. |
| Limited planning between different surgical departments. Each surgical department had their own surgery program that basically was a text file. | One common electronic surgery planning system for all departments. Designated coordinator supervises the planning process between departments. | ||
| One common overview for all departments allows better coordination and planning and might lead to more operations per day. Cancellations caused by facility shortcomings, such as double-booking of the same equipment, may be reduced. | |||
| Surgery | Patient showed up for pre-assessment the same day or one day in advance of the planned surgery. Routines varied between departments. | All patients scheduled for elective surgery are received at the day-surgery center. New standardized routines are implemented for pre-surgery preparations. | Centralizing all surgery patients and standardizing routines may reduce variations in the clinical process and thereby improve quality. |
| After surgery | Patients discharged from different departments with different routines. Discharge letter was not always in hand when the patient left. | All day-surgery patients are discharged from the day-surgery center through new standardized routines. | |
| Discharge letter is written and given to the patient before discharge. |
Comparison of outcome measures before and after the interventions
| Cancellation rate (mean % per month) | 8.5 | 4.9 | <0.0011 |
| Transformed cancellation rate2 | 0.30 | 0.22 | <0.0011 |
| Total number of scheduled operations (median per month) | 373 | 400 | 0.04 3 |
| Total number of performed operations (median per month) 323 378 0.04 3 | 323 | 378 | 0.04 2 |
| Emergency cases (median per month) 102 103 1.0 3 | 102 | 103 | 1.0 2 |
| (Based on time the time period Jan 2006 to Apr 2010) | |||
| Number of consultation at outpatient clinic (mean per month) | 2722 | 3021 | 0.006 1 |
| (Based on the time period May 2006 to Apr 2010) |
1 Student’s t-test.
2 Using the Freeman-Tukey double arcsine transformation.
3 Mann–Whitney U test.
Figure 1Monthly CRs at the hospital.