M Á Martín-Ferrero1, O Faour-Martín2, C Simon-Perez1, M Pérez-Herrero3, J A de Pedro-Moro4. 1. Service of Traumatology and Orthopaedic Surgery, Clinic Universitary Hospital of Valladolid, Valladolid, Spain. 2. Service of Traumatology and Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital of Ávila-Sacyl, Ávila, Spain; C\Antonio Montesinos, N° 2, 1° C, 37003 Salamanca, Spain. Electronic address: ofmartin@msn.com. 3. Service of Anaesthesiology, Clinic Universitary Hospital of Valladolid, Valladolid, Spain. 4. University of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The concept of day surgery is becoming an increasingly important part of elective surgery worldwide. Relentless pressure to cut costs may constrain clinical judgment regarding the most appropriate location for a patient's surgical care. The aim of this study was to determine clinical and quality indicators relating to our experience in orthopedic day durgery, mainly in relation to unplanned overnight admission and readmission rates. Additionally, we focused on describing the main characteristics of the patients that experienced complications, and compared the patient satisfaction rates following ambulatory and non-ambulatory procedures. METHODS: We evaluated 10,032 patients who underwent surgical orthopedic procedures according to the protocols of our Ambulatory Surgery Unit. All complications that occurred were noted. A quality-of-life assessment (SF-36 test) was carried out both pre- and postoperatively. Ambulatory substitution rates and quality indicators for orthopedic procedures were also determined. RESULTS: The major complication rate was minimal, with no mortal cases, and there was a high rate of ambulatory substitution for the procedures studied. Outcomes of the SF-36 questionnaire showed significant improvement postoperatively. An unplanned overnight admission rate of 0.14 % was achieved. CONCLUSIONS: Our institution has shown that it is possible to provide good-quality ambulatory orthopedic surgery. There still appears to be the potential to increase the proportion of these procedures. Surgeons and anesthesiologists must strongly adhere to strict patient selection criteria for ambulatory orthopedic surgery in order to reduce complications in the immediate postoperative term.
PURPOSE: The concept of day surgery is becoming an increasingly important part of elective surgery worldwide. Relentless pressure to cut costs may constrain clinical judgment regarding the most appropriate location for a patient's surgical care. The aim of this study was to determine clinical and quality indicators relating to our experience in orthopedic day durgery, mainly in relation to unplanned overnight admission and readmission rates. Additionally, we focused on describing the main characteristics of the patients that experienced complications, and compared the patient satisfaction rates following ambulatory and non-ambulatory procedures. METHODS: We evaluated 10,032 patients who underwent surgical orthopedic procedures according to the protocols of our Ambulatory Surgery Unit. All complications that occurred were noted. A quality-of-life assessment (SF-36 test) was carried out both pre- and postoperatively. Ambulatory substitution rates and quality indicators for orthopedic procedures were also determined. RESULTS: The major complication rate was minimal, with no mortal cases, and there was a high rate of ambulatory substitution for the procedures studied. Outcomes of the SF-36 questionnaire showed significant improvement postoperatively. An unplanned overnight admission rate of 0.14 % was achieved. CONCLUSIONS: Our institution has shown that it is possible to provide good-quality ambulatory orthopedic surgery. There still appears to be the potential to increase the proportion of these procedures. Surgeons and anesthesiologists must strongly adhere to strict patient selection criteria for ambulatory orthopedic surgery in order to reduce complications in the immediate postoperative term.
Authors: Morag Tolvi; Hanna Tuominen-Salo; Mika Paavola; Kimmo Mattila; Leena-Maija Aaltonen; Lasse Lehtonen Journal: Patient Saf Surg Date: 2020-06-26
Authors: Kristin Sandrowski; Moody Kwok; Greg Gallant; Jack Abboudi; Robert Takei; Samir Sodha; Daren Aita; Mark Wang; Christopher Jones; Pedro K Beredjiklian Journal: Cureus Date: 2021-05-26
Authors: D Barbier; D N'Dele; M Bennis; C Thevenin-Lemoine; J Sales De Gauzy; F Accadbled Journal: J Child Orthop Date: 2019-02-01 Impact factor: 1.548