| Literature DB >> 26183086 |
Lesley Gotlib Conn1, Marg McKenzie2, Emily A Pearsall3, Robin S McLeod4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) is a multimodal evidence-based approach to patient care that has become the standard in elective colorectal surgery. Implemented globally, ERAS programmes represent a considerable change in practice for many surgical care providers. Our current understanding of specific implementation and sustainability challenges is limited. In January 2013, we began a 2-year ERAS implementation for elective colorectal surgery in 15 academic hospitals in Ontario. The purpose of this study was to understand the process enablers and barriers that influenced the success of ERAS implementation in these centres with a view towards supporting sustainable change.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26183086 PMCID: PMC4504167 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0289-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Summary of ERAS guideline recommendations
| Preoperative | Preoperative counselling |
| Reduced fasting duration | |
| Carbohydrate drinks | |
| No mechanical bowel preparation | |
| Intraoperative | NSAIDS (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) |
| ± TEA (thoracic epidural analgesia) | |
| No abdominal drains | |
| No nasogastric tubes | |
| Multimodal pain management | |
| Thromboprophylaxis | |
| Surgical site infection (SSI) prophylaxis | |
| Goal-directed fluid management | |
| Normothermia | |
| TEA or intravenous (IV) Lidocaine | |
| Postoperative | Fluid restriction |
| Early removal of urinary catheters | |
| Gum chewing | |
| Early ambulation | |
| Early feeding | |
| Multimodal pain management |
Normalization Process Theory constructs and definitions
| Construct | Definition |
|---|---|
| Coherence | The process and work of sense-making and understanding that individuals and organizations have to go through in order to promote or inhibit the routine embedding of a practice. |
| Cognitive participation | The process and work that individuals and organizations have to go through in order to enrol individuals to engage with the new practice. |
| Collective action | The work that individuals and organizations have to do to enact the new practice. |
| Reflexive monitoring | The work inherent in the informal and formal appraisal of a new practice once it is in use, in order to assess its advantages and disadvantages, and which develops users’ comprehension of the effects of a practice. |
Reference [33]
Site characteristics for the study period May 2013–January 2015
| Site | No. of enrolled patients | No. of participating surgeons |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 56 | 2 |
| 2 | 63 | 7 |
| 3 | 79 | 5 |
| 4 | 96 | 5 |
| 5 | 99 | 8 |
| 6 | 109 | 5 |
| 7 | 113 | 5 |
| 8 | 136 | 10 |
| 9 | 172 | 8 |
| 10 | 188 | 4 |
| 11 | 213 | 5 |
| 12 | 214 | 9 |
| 13 | 226 | 11 |
| 14 | 277 | 9 |
| 15 | 434 | 9 |
Interview participants
| Participant role | No. of interviews/eligible participants |
|---|---|
| Surgeon champions | 15/15 |
| Anaesthesiologist champions | 14/15a |
| Nurse champions | 15/15 |
| Coordinators | 14b/15c |
| Total | 58/60 |
aOne anaesthesia champion is on leave of absence
bAt one site, both the former and current site coordinator were interviewed
cOne coordinator was not available
Coherence—supporting quotes
| Champion fit | Actually I was interested in the Fast Track before the others were interested. We started doing this at [hospital] with Surgeon X and Surgeon Y before everybody started doing it. I think we were probably doing it probably for about two or three years before everybody started. (Anaesthesiologist) |
| Basically we started a similar programme a few years ago and that’s still in progress - Enhanced Recovery Colon Surgery. So it was called ERCS and we had a little bit of funding as well to start it in the hospital and there were a few uptake from other surgeons. It was difficult to convince them at that time. And so it became almost natural, when ERAS came in, they suggested that I take the lead on this one. (Surgeon) | |
| Buy-in | The six surgeons who are seeing patients, they’re all engaged in this. I think one of the greatest things is that people know that ERAS is not a crazy thing, it’s structural. You can accommodate people. There are 10 interventions that you do, but if you cannot do ten, you can do only 5. But just do 5 and try to accommodate people and that way people feel happy with that. (Surgeon) |
| Luckily it was easy to implement our part from an anesthesia perspective because the guidelines fell into what we do anyway and we do have the resources, the manpower, and the knowledge for the most part to implement these and the guidelines were no surprise to anyone. (Anaesthesiologist) | |
| Resistance | I think that was one of the biggest challenges was feeding patients early because for so many nurses, they associated that with patients developing ileus. I think some of them still do. They feel that the patients who develop an ileus, it must be because we fed them early. (Nurse) |
| There are a lot of people who are very critical or skeptical of the value of Gabapentin and are concerned that it makes the patient sleepier post-op. And you know, it’s kind of an issue of personal preference. I think the evidence for Lidocaine infusions is very strong and most people do as well but again, you just have to read the literature to know that. (Anaesthesiologist) | |
| Team cohesion | Our surgeon champion’s great. I send him an email. He’s emailing me when he's on bloody holidays last week. I didn’t realize he was away. (Nurse) |
| I think the interaction between the surgeon champion and nurse champion and myself have been very very good. I think the team has really helped, I think ERAS has really helped the teamwork. (Anaesthesiologist) | |
| The only challenge that I saw personally was trying to get our anesthesia champion interested enough to get his group onboard so that’s where the challenges were from my viewpoint. (Surgeon) |
Cognitive participation—supporting quotes
| Community of practice | The network of all of the champions from the hospitals has been so instrumental in helping our hospital. The continued ongoing communication with the monthly phone calls for example. The website being fantastic, there’s just been so much support around this. (Nurse) |
| The networking and the sharing of resources, I thought that was just absolutely fabulous. The people that were chosen from each hospital I think were really good champions. Very well-rounded, experienced, self-confident, not about, “look what I’ve done.” More like, “this is what we’ve done. Do you want it?”(Nurse) | |
| Engagement strategies | Eventually I just met with several of the more resistant people to get a sense of what their concerns were and whatnot. So we’ve had meetings, we’ve had emails. A variety of different things to get people to buy into it essentially. It’s been a long process of that but eventually people have. (Surgeon) |
| I go to most ORs and talk to the anesthesiologists to try and translate and clarify areas and make them understand what compliance with the program meant. (Anaesthesiologist) | |
| Opportunities for co-creation | For me it was very important because it set the stage for partnership, so we had OT, PT, dietician involved. For each section, we had the ET nurses, we had frontline nurses, we also had the charge nurses. It was very very important because I wanted them to have the sense that they developed it. I’ve given you guidelines. How are we going to do it? It was very very important. Better buy-in. (Nurse) |
| We got together and formed a work group of all the people who would be involved in implementing the various parts of the guideline. So this group was about 10 people, there was a dietitian, someone from physio, someone from OT, someone from nursing etc. Everyone who would have a stake in or in their workflow being changed and then over the next several months, we looked through the guideline and each piece worked on implementing their own, and me and the nurse person for that would essentially lead those meetings to try to get things implemented. (Surgeon) | |
| Provide updates | I think it was about 3 months ago we got a report and I emailed the department the report and told them what our hospital number was. And then in the email I just mentioned some of the places we need to do a little bit better. (Anaesthesiologist) |
| We did a follow-up series of lunch and learns as well as breakfasts where we actually presented the data to the different areas because it’s been about a year and a half or so that we’ve been involved in ERAS so we presented some of the data from the report that we got back. (Nurse) |
Collective action—supporting quotes
| Chief support | I think you have to give some credit to the chief in Anesthesia. He accepted the ideas almost right away and [study PI] and I went to speak to the chief of all departments directly and he supported it. (Anaesthesiologist) |
| It took a lot to get [name] onboard. He’s the Chief of Anesthesia. He kind of had the attitude of, which really pissed me off, sorry, “oh, we don’t need cheerleaders. We just need to do it. Like people will just adjust." Well, no, you need the education. People will have questions and answers and you know, giving opportunity to ask questions so they understand. I mean, I think that was a big big hurdle there. He was very difficult to get onboard. (Anaesthesiologist) | |
| Systems integration | We’ve actually automated it so it appears on our OR schedule. Senior management asked our IT guys to associate ERAS procedures with the tag “ERAS.” So on our OR record, they show up as “ERAS rt hemicolectomy” as a flag to both surgical and anesthesia team that this patient is an ERAS patient. (Anaesthesiologist) |
| The anesthesiologists aren’t unique to colorectal so it was a much bigger group of people to try and engage. You know, several months after we started, I'd be in the room with an anesthesiologist and they’d say, “so what’s this ERAS anyway?” So there was a piece of education there that was a bit harder to do. (Surgeon) |
Reflexive monitoring—supporting quotes
| Use of data | Since we last got the ERAS report, we did a follow-up series of lunch and learns as well as breakfasts where we actually presented the data to the different areas, because it’s been about a year and a half that we’ve been involved in ERAS so we presented some of the data, as well as just thanked the staff for their contributions. (Nurse) |
| Need for audit and feedback | People need to see the impact of what they do. And that will be a challenge in that continuing to have information readily available to show the impact of what they’re doing and help them understand what they do makes a difference. I think that’s something that will make it sustainable. But that’s challenging because right now, we’re actively collecting data on these patients and that will eventually go away. (Surgeon) |
| Evidence of a culture change | I do think there’s been a culture shift. I think that’s something that really can take a long time. I don’t think we’re 100% there yet but I think we made some great strides in that way. Because that for me is one of the most important things is if you’re going to have sustainability you have to have people believe in the program, believe in the guidelines. (Nurse) |
| Normalization of ERAS | I want to actually get rid of the word ERAS completely just because I think it makes people think that there is something else other than enhancing someone’s recovery. There is nothing else. Every patient you’re trying to enhance their recovery. So there is no patient who shouldn’t be ERAS. (Surgeon) |
| I think people don’t even think of it as a trial or a project anymore and I think the data’s already reflected that it’s been beneficial for our length of stay. So it’s not as though from our point of view, things are going to change. Everyone’s going to treat all colorectal surgery cases with an ERAS protocol at our hospital. I think people realize it’s the way it’s going to be. (Anaesthesiologist) |