1. This document provides guidelines for day case and short stay surgery from a working party established by the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland and the British Association of Day Surgery.
2. Effective pre-operative preparation and protocol-driven, nurse-led discharge are fundamental to safe and effective day and short stay surgery.
3. Selection of patients for day surgery considers social factors like having a caregiver at home, medical factors like fitness and stability of chronic conditions, and surgical factors like risk of complications requiring immediate medical attention.
This document summarizes a policy brief on increasing day surgery (ambulatory surgery where patients are discharged the same day). It discusses the history and growth of day surgery as a cost-effective alternative to inpatient surgery. While day surgery accounts for nearly 90% of surgeries in some countries, rates vary widely between countries and hospitals. The brief examines how expanding day surgery could benefit healthcare systems by increasing throughput, reducing costs and wait times. However, barriers still exist in some countries that prevent day surgery from reaching its full potential. Overcoming these barriers may require changes to policies, regulations, healthcare facilities and staffing.
The document discusses ambulatory or day surgery. It defines day surgery as when a patient is admitted for a procedure and discharged within 12 hours. Day surgery has advantages over traditional inpatient surgery like lower costs, faster recovery, and less disruption to daily life. The document outlines patient selection criteria, common procedures performed as day surgery, and important considerations for the preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative periods to facilitate day surgery and recovery.
Dr. Kenneth Dickie from Royal Centre of Plastic Surgery in Barrie, Ontario explained the refining experience for Ambulatory Surgery.
If you have any questions, please contact Dr. Kenneth Dickie at http://royalcentreofplasticsurgery.com/
This document discusses day case or ambulatory surgery. It notes that over the last 30 years, there has been rapid expansion in the use of day-case surgery, with the percentage of patients going home the same day increasing from less than 10% to approximately 65%. Suitable procedures are those that take less than 90 minutes, do not cause excessive bleeding or pain, and have minimal postoperative physiological disturbances. The growth of ambulatory surgery has been facilitated by improved anesthetic techniques and shorter-acting drugs that allow for faster recovery.
This document provides biographical information about the editors of the book "Anesthesia in Day Care Surgery". M.M. Begani has over 40 years of experience as a surgeon in Mumbai, India. He helped pioneer the use of local anesthesia for day surgeries. Dheeraj V. Mulchandani is a consultant surgeon in Mumbai with extensive experience in general and laparoscopic surgery. Shagufta Choudhary is a consultant anesthesiologist who has dedicated her career to advancing ambulatory anesthesia and minimizing hospitalization time for day surgeries. The introduction emphasizes how this handbook aims to enable day surgeries across many specialties using various anesthesia techniques, which could help
The document provides guidelines for ambulatory anesthesia and surgery. It recommends that anesthesiologists play a leadership role in all ambulatory surgical facilities. The guidelines apply to all settings involving anesthesiology and are meant to encourage high quality patient care. Facilities must be properly equipped and staffed to handle emergencies. Patient care should include a pre-anesthesia evaluation, anesthesia plan, administration or supervision of anesthesia by qualified professionals, and discharge only when medically appropriate.
This document discusses ambulatory and fast track anesthesia. It covers topics such as the benefits of ambulatory surgery including lower costs and greater efficiency. It describes different facility designs for ambulatory surgery and lists many common procedures that can be done on an outpatient basis. The document outlines considerations for patient selection and preoperative preparation including pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic techniques. It also discusses various anesthetic techniques for ambulatory surgery like general anesthesia, regional anesthesia, and monitored anesthesia care. Fast tracking approaches to minimize side effects like PONV are also summarized.
This document discusses day case surgery (DCS). It begins with an introduction on the prevalence of DCS internationally. It then covers the definition, history, merits and demerits of DCS. Key aspects of setting up and running a successful DCS unit are described, including space requirements, staffing, suitable procedures, pre-op preparation, and discharge criteria. The document concludes with a discussion on audit and special considerations for DCS in children and emergencies.
This document summarizes a policy brief on increasing day surgery (ambulatory surgery where patients are discharged the same day). It discusses the history and growth of day surgery as a cost-effective alternative to inpatient surgery. While day surgery accounts for nearly 90% of surgeries in some countries, rates vary widely between countries and hospitals. The brief examines how expanding day surgery could benefit healthcare systems by increasing throughput, reducing costs and wait times. However, barriers still exist in some countries that prevent day surgery from reaching its full potential. Overcoming these barriers may require changes to policies, regulations, healthcare facilities and staffing.
The document discusses ambulatory or day surgery. It defines day surgery as when a patient is admitted for a procedure and discharged within 12 hours. Day surgery has advantages over traditional inpatient surgery like lower costs, faster recovery, and less disruption to daily life. The document outlines patient selection criteria, common procedures performed as day surgery, and important considerations for the preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative periods to facilitate day surgery and recovery.
Dr. Kenneth Dickie from Royal Centre of Plastic Surgery in Barrie, Ontario explained the refining experience for Ambulatory Surgery.
If you have any questions, please contact Dr. Kenneth Dickie at http://royalcentreofplasticsurgery.com/
This document discusses day case or ambulatory surgery. It notes that over the last 30 years, there has been rapid expansion in the use of day-case surgery, with the percentage of patients going home the same day increasing from less than 10% to approximately 65%. Suitable procedures are those that take less than 90 minutes, do not cause excessive bleeding or pain, and have minimal postoperative physiological disturbances. The growth of ambulatory surgery has been facilitated by improved anesthetic techniques and shorter-acting drugs that allow for faster recovery.
This document provides biographical information about the editors of the book "Anesthesia in Day Care Surgery". M.M. Begani has over 40 years of experience as a surgeon in Mumbai, India. He helped pioneer the use of local anesthesia for day surgeries. Dheeraj V. Mulchandani is a consultant surgeon in Mumbai with extensive experience in general and laparoscopic surgery. Shagufta Choudhary is a consultant anesthesiologist who has dedicated her career to advancing ambulatory anesthesia and minimizing hospitalization time for day surgeries. The introduction emphasizes how this handbook aims to enable day surgeries across many specialties using various anesthesia techniques, which could help
The document provides guidelines for ambulatory anesthesia and surgery. It recommends that anesthesiologists play a leadership role in all ambulatory surgical facilities. The guidelines apply to all settings involving anesthesiology and are meant to encourage high quality patient care. Facilities must be properly equipped and staffed to handle emergencies. Patient care should include a pre-anesthesia evaluation, anesthesia plan, administration or supervision of anesthesia by qualified professionals, and discharge only when medically appropriate.
This document discusses ambulatory and fast track anesthesia. It covers topics such as the benefits of ambulatory surgery including lower costs and greater efficiency. It describes different facility designs for ambulatory surgery and lists many common procedures that can be done on an outpatient basis. The document outlines considerations for patient selection and preoperative preparation including pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic techniques. It also discusses various anesthetic techniques for ambulatory surgery like general anesthesia, regional anesthesia, and monitored anesthesia care. Fast tracking approaches to minimize side effects like PONV are also summarized.
This document discusses day case surgery (DCS). It begins with an introduction on the prevalence of DCS internationally. It then covers the definition, history, merits and demerits of DCS. Key aspects of setting up and running a successful DCS unit are described, including space requirements, staffing, suitable procedures, pre-op preparation, and discharge criteria. The document concludes with a discussion on audit and special considerations for DCS in children and emergencies.
This document provides an overview of day care or ambulatory surgery. It discusses the history and development of day care surgery. Key points include that day care surgery aims to have patients discharged on the same day of surgery. Patient selection involves assessing medical, social and surgical factors to identify appropriate candidates. The document also outlines common procedures performed in day care settings and considerations for anesthesia, analgesia, and post-operative recovery and discharge criteria. The overall goal of day care surgery is to provide surgical care without an overnight hospital stay when possible.
This document provides an overview of the history and definitions of ambulatory surgery. Key points include:
- Ambulatory surgery is defined as surgery where the patient is discharged on the same working day, in contrast to inpatient surgery where patients stay overnight.
- Ambulatory surgery became common in the 1970s-1980s in developed countries, where now 50-70% of surgeries are done on an ambulatory basis.
- Ambulatory surgery provides benefits in terms of safety, quality, economics, and staff satisfaction compared to traditional inpatient surgery models. When proper standards of care are followed, ambulatory surgery has been shown to be as safe as inpatient surgery.
Surgeon Champion Call 2010 - Dr Peter Dorismart1971
This document summarizes the journey of Surrey Memorial Hospital in implementing the ACS-NSQIP program to track surgical outcomes and improve quality. It describes initial challenges with data quality including missing data, coding errors and inconsistencies that were addressed through staff education and updated processes. It provides examples of pneumonia and catheter-associated urinary tract infection prevention initiatives that were undertaken using a team-based approach including practice changes, education and audits to reduce infection rates. Graphics show outcomes data over time comparing the hospital to NSQIP benchmarks.
Perioperative evaluation and management of surgicalFateme Roodsarabi
This document provides guidance on preoperative evaluation and management of patients undergoing elective surgery. It recommends focusing the evaluation on the patient's medical history and physical exam rather than routine screening tests. It provides criteria for when basic lab tests or specialist consultations are warranted based on a patient's health conditions and type of surgery. Guidance is given for the preoperative management of common patient populations like those with cardiac, pulmonary, renal or liver disease, diabetes, or who are pregnant/elderly.
This document discusses ambulatory anesthesia and day-care surgery. It provides a brief history of ambulatory anesthesia, noting key developments from 1903 to present day. It describes the objectives and techniques of anesthesia for day-care surgery, including premedication, induction agents, maintenance techniques, regional versus general anesthesia, advantages and disadvantages, selection criteria for patients, and discharge criteria. The success of day-care surgery depends on appropriate patient selection, facility availability, and type of surgical procedure.
Day care obstetrics and gynecology provides inpatient level care to patients on an outpatient basis. It was first established in 1969 in the US and has since expanded globally. Day care allows for monitoring of high-risk pregnancies, infertility procedures, fetal medicine procedures, and gynecological surgeries. Patients are selected based on surgical, medical, and social criteria to ensure safety. Procedures are performed using local anesthesia, IV sedation, or general anesthesia with rapid induction and recovery. Strict discharge criteria involving patient status and availability of a caretaker ensure safe recovery at home.
This document discusses day surgery and ambulatory surgery. It defines day surgery as admission and discharge of a patient within 12 hours for a specific procedure. Commonly used terms like outpatient surgery and same-day surgery are explained. The history of day surgery is discussed, including the pioneering work of Harold Griffith in the late 19th century. Key factors that enabled the growth of day surgery include improvements in anesthesia techniques and the rise of minimally invasive procedures. Patient selection criteria include medical fitness, social support, and types of procedures suitable for day surgery. A multidisciplinary approach involving nursing and anesthesia assessment is emphasized.
Ambulatory Anesthesia and Non–Operating Room Anesthesia (NORA)Saeid Safari
GUIDELINES FOR AMBULATORY ANESTHESIA AND SURGERY (American Society of Anesthesiologists)
GUIDELINES FOR AMBULATORY ANESTHESIA AND SURGERY
Non–Operating Room Anesthesia (NORA)
Principles of surgery. Day case surgery is a rapidly evolving surgical sub speciality that seeks to eliminate the need for prolonged admission in surgical patients and the attendant complications of prolonged immobilization. It is based on the documented evidence that most post op patients does not require specialised post op care and hence can be allowed to recover at home. This form of surgery appeals to patients and their families due to the fact that it allows only minimal interruption of patient's social life
The document discusses preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative care for a patient undergoing surgery. In the preoperative stage, patients undergo assessments of their medical history and comorbidities, labs and tests are ordered to optimize the patient's health status, and the surgical plan is arranged. Intraoperatively, strict infection control protocols are followed and checklists are used to ensure safety. Postoperatively, patients are monitored, complications are prevented, and care is documented before discharge. The overall goal is to safely prepare the patient for surgery, perform the procedure, and provide care during recovery.
1) Day case anesthesia, also known as ambulatory surgery or same-day surgery, allows patients to be admitted for a surgical procedure and investigation but return home the same day without an overnight hospital stay.
2) There has been a rapid expansion in the use of day case surgery over the last 30 years, with approximately 65% of surgeries in the United States now performed on an outpatient basis.
3) Day case anesthesia provides advantages like reduced costs, increased bed availability, and less risk of hospital-acquired infections compared to traditional inpatient surgery.
The document discusses preoperative evaluation and management. It aims to identify any medical comorbidities that could affect surgical outcomes rather than broadly screening for disease. A thorough history and physical exam are important to understand preexisting conditions and risks. Investigations should be ordered selectively based on medical history. Preoperative preparation includes securing IV access, emptying bowels if needed, and providing thromboprophylaxis or antibiotics if required. Special considerations depend on the surgery and any cardiovascular, respiratory, or other system involvement.
General Preoperative &Postoperative Care of Surgical PatientsOmarAlaidaroos3
1. Preoperative evaluation and preparation of surgical patients involves a thorough history, physical exam, appropriate diagnostic testing, counseling and informed consent obtaining, optimization of medical conditions, and NPO status prior to surgery.
2. Intraoperative care focuses on anesthetic management and monitoring while postoperative care aims to monitor for complications, manage pain and encourage early mobilization through actions like incentive spirometry.
3. Common complications assessed and managed in the postoperative period include respiratory issues like atelectasis and pneumonia, infections, thromboembolic events, and other surgery-specific complications.
This document discusses pediatric day surgery (PDS) and day case laparoscopic surgery (DCLS) at Apollo Children's Hospital in Chennai, India. It provides details on: the history and increasing use of PDS; patient selection criteria for DCLS; anesthesia and surgical protocols used; a retrospective analysis of 85 DCLS cases with no reported complications; and conclusions that DCLS can be performed safely without compromising patient care when a multidisciplinary team approach and clinical care pathway are followed.
This document discusses the preparation, care, and management of surgical patients from the preoperative period through postoperative recovery. It covers preoperative consultation, investigations, and optimization of comorbidities. Intraoperative care focuses on sterility, monitoring, and special considerations for different procedures. Postoperative monitoring in recovery emphasizes airway, breathing, circulation, temperature, and pain management. Ongoing inpatient care includes wound checks, fluid balance, mobilization, and communication between medical staff and discharge instructions. The overall goal is to provide thorough perioperative care and optimize outcomes for surgical patients.
This study summarizes the treatment of 187 patients with penetrating thoracic injuries admitted to a hospital in Taiz, Yemen during 2015-2016. It finds that most patients were male (90.9%), between 18-60 years old (83.4%), and injured by gunshot wounds (70.1%). The majority of injuries were isolated penetrating thoracic injuries (74.9%) rather than combined with abdominal injuries (25.1%). The most common treatment was tube thoracostomy (84.5%), while a minority (15%) required thoracotomy. Treatment options correlated with injury type and mechanism, with more thoracotomies performed for gunshot wounds compared to blast injuries. The study aims to describe management
The document discusses the care of surgical patients from pre-operation through recovery. It covers preparing the patient physically and psychologically for surgery, different types of surgeries and anesthesia, and the roles and responsibilities of staff in caring for surgical patients before, during, and after a procedure. Common patient fears are also addressed.
The document discusses improving safety standards for office-based surgery and anesthesia. It notes a lack of uniform regulation has led to increasing complexity of cases performed in office settings. It introduces the Institute for Safety in Office Based Surgery, a non-profit established in 2009 to promote patient safety, develop tools for risk detection, and encourage physician education and evidence-based standards of care. It also references the high-profile case of Joan Rivers' death from complications during an outpatient procedure.
This document discusses patient selection criteria and preoperative assessment and preparation for ambulatory anesthesia. It covers suitable procedures, duration limits, patient characteristics, contraindications, preoperative evaluation, and both nonpharmacologic and pharmacologic preparation. For patient selection, it recommends considering factors like procedure type, duration, medical history, age and contraindications. It also discusses anxiolysis, sedation, preemptive analgesia and preventing nausea for premedication. The goal is to safely perform procedures as outpatients and facilitate early recovery.
A case report of open reduction, internal fixation and platting of clavicle f...iosrjce
IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences is one of the speciality Journal in Dental Science and Medical Science published by International Organization of Scientific Research (IOSR). The Journal publishes papers of the highest scientific merit and widest possible scope work in all areas related to medical and dental science. The Journal welcome review articles, leading medical and clinical research articles, technical notes, case reports and others.
Caudal Anaesthesia for CTEV with Post-Op Analgesia in Paediatric Patient- A C...iosrjce
IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences is one of the speciality Journal in Dental Science and Medical Science published by International Organization of Scientific Research (IOSR). The Journal publishes papers of the highest scientific merit and widest possible scope work in all areas related to medical and dental science. The Journal welcome review articles, leading medical and clinical research articles, technical notes, case reports and others.
This document provides an overview of day care or ambulatory surgery. It discusses the history and development of day care surgery. Key points include that day care surgery aims to have patients discharged on the same day of surgery. Patient selection involves assessing medical, social and surgical factors to identify appropriate candidates. The document also outlines common procedures performed in day care settings and considerations for anesthesia, analgesia, and post-operative recovery and discharge criteria. The overall goal of day care surgery is to provide surgical care without an overnight hospital stay when possible.
This document provides an overview of the history and definitions of ambulatory surgery. Key points include:
- Ambulatory surgery is defined as surgery where the patient is discharged on the same working day, in contrast to inpatient surgery where patients stay overnight.
- Ambulatory surgery became common in the 1970s-1980s in developed countries, where now 50-70% of surgeries are done on an ambulatory basis.
- Ambulatory surgery provides benefits in terms of safety, quality, economics, and staff satisfaction compared to traditional inpatient surgery models. When proper standards of care are followed, ambulatory surgery has been shown to be as safe as inpatient surgery.
Surgeon Champion Call 2010 - Dr Peter Dorismart1971
This document summarizes the journey of Surrey Memorial Hospital in implementing the ACS-NSQIP program to track surgical outcomes and improve quality. It describes initial challenges with data quality including missing data, coding errors and inconsistencies that were addressed through staff education and updated processes. It provides examples of pneumonia and catheter-associated urinary tract infection prevention initiatives that were undertaken using a team-based approach including practice changes, education and audits to reduce infection rates. Graphics show outcomes data over time comparing the hospital to NSQIP benchmarks.
Perioperative evaluation and management of surgicalFateme Roodsarabi
This document provides guidance on preoperative evaluation and management of patients undergoing elective surgery. It recommends focusing the evaluation on the patient's medical history and physical exam rather than routine screening tests. It provides criteria for when basic lab tests or specialist consultations are warranted based on a patient's health conditions and type of surgery. Guidance is given for the preoperative management of common patient populations like those with cardiac, pulmonary, renal or liver disease, diabetes, or who are pregnant/elderly.
This document discusses ambulatory anesthesia and day-care surgery. It provides a brief history of ambulatory anesthesia, noting key developments from 1903 to present day. It describes the objectives and techniques of anesthesia for day-care surgery, including premedication, induction agents, maintenance techniques, regional versus general anesthesia, advantages and disadvantages, selection criteria for patients, and discharge criteria. The success of day-care surgery depends on appropriate patient selection, facility availability, and type of surgical procedure.
Day care obstetrics and gynecology provides inpatient level care to patients on an outpatient basis. It was first established in 1969 in the US and has since expanded globally. Day care allows for monitoring of high-risk pregnancies, infertility procedures, fetal medicine procedures, and gynecological surgeries. Patients are selected based on surgical, medical, and social criteria to ensure safety. Procedures are performed using local anesthesia, IV sedation, or general anesthesia with rapid induction and recovery. Strict discharge criteria involving patient status and availability of a caretaker ensure safe recovery at home.
This document discusses day surgery and ambulatory surgery. It defines day surgery as admission and discharge of a patient within 12 hours for a specific procedure. Commonly used terms like outpatient surgery and same-day surgery are explained. The history of day surgery is discussed, including the pioneering work of Harold Griffith in the late 19th century. Key factors that enabled the growth of day surgery include improvements in anesthesia techniques and the rise of minimally invasive procedures. Patient selection criteria include medical fitness, social support, and types of procedures suitable for day surgery. A multidisciplinary approach involving nursing and anesthesia assessment is emphasized.
Ambulatory Anesthesia and Non–Operating Room Anesthesia (NORA)Saeid Safari
GUIDELINES FOR AMBULATORY ANESTHESIA AND SURGERY (American Society of Anesthesiologists)
GUIDELINES FOR AMBULATORY ANESTHESIA AND SURGERY
Non–Operating Room Anesthesia (NORA)
Principles of surgery. Day case surgery is a rapidly evolving surgical sub speciality that seeks to eliminate the need for prolonged admission in surgical patients and the attendant complications of prolonged immobilization. It is based on the documented evidence that most post op patients does not require specialised post op care and hence can be allowed to recover at home. This form of surgery appeals to patients and their families due to the fact that it allows only minimal interruption of patient's social life
The document discusses preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative care for a patient undergoing surgery. In the preoperative stage, patients undergo assessments of their medical history and comorbidities, labs and tests are ordered to optimize the patient's health status, and the surgical plan is arranged. Intraoperatively, strict infection control protocols are followed and checklists are used to ensure safety. Postoperatively, patients are monitored, complications are prevented, and care is documented before discharge. The overall goal is to safely prepare the patient for surgery, perform the procedure, and provide care during recovery.
1) Day case anesthesia, also known as ambulatory surgery or same-day surgery, allows patients to be admitted for a surgical procedure and investigation but return home the same day without an overnight hospital stay.
2) There has been a rapid expansion in the use of day case surgery over the last 30 years, with approximately 65% of surgeries in the United States now performed on an outpatient basis.
3) Day case anesthesia provides advantages like reduced costs, increased bed availability, and less risk of hospital-acquired infections compared to traditional inpatient surgery.
The document discusses preoperative evaluation and management. It aims to identify any medical comorbidities that could affect surgical outcomes rather than broadly screening for disease. A thorough history and physical exam are important to understand preexisting conditions and risks. Investigations should be ordered selectively based on medical history. Preoperative preparation includes securing IV access, emptying bowels if needed, and providing thromboprophylaxis or antibiotics if required. Special considerations depend on the surgery and any cardiovascular, respiratory, or other system involvement.
General Preoperative &Postoperative Care of Surgical PatientsOmarAlaidaroos3
1. Preoperative evaluation and preparation of surgical patients involves a thorough history, physical exam, appropriate diagnostic testing, counseling and informed consent obtaining, optimization of medical conditions, and NPO status prior to surgery.
2. Intraoperative care focuses on anesthetic management and monitoring while postoperative care aims to monitor for complications, manage pain and encourage early mobilization through actions like incentive spirometry.
3. Common complications assessed and managed in the postoperative period include respiratory issues like atelectasis and pneumonia, infections, thromboembolic events, and other surgery-specific complications.
This document discusses pediatric day surgery (PDS) and day case laparoscopic surgery (DCLS) at Apollo Children's Hospital in Chennai, India. It provides details on: the history and increasing use of PDS; patient selection criteria for DCLS; anesthesia and surgical protocols used; a retrospective analysis of 85 DCLS cases with no reported complications; and conclusions that DCLS can be performed safely without compromising patient care when a multidisciplinary team approach and clinical care pathway are followed.
This document discusses the preparation, care, and management of surgical patients from the preoperative period through postoperative recovery. It covers preoperative consultation, investigations, and optimization of comorbidities. Intraoperative care focuses on sterility, monitoring, and special considerations for different procedures. Postoperative monitoring in recovery emphasizes airway, breathing, circulation, temperature, and pain management. Ongoing inpatient care includes wound checks, fluid balance, mobilization, and communication between medical staff and discharge instructions. The overall goal is to provide thorough perioperative care and optimize outcomes for surgical patients.
This study summarizes the treatment of 187 patients with penetrating thoracic injuries admitted to a hospital in Taiz, Yemen during 2015-2016. It finds that most patients were male (90.9%), between 18-60 years old (83.4%), and injured by gunshot wounds (70.1%). The majority of injuries were isolated penetrating thoracic injuries (74.9%) rather than combined with abdominal injuries (25.1%). The most common treatment was tube thoracostomy (84.5%), while a minority (15%) required thoracotomy. Treatment options correlated with injury type and mechanism, with more thoracotomies performed for gunshot wounds compared to blast injuries. The study aims to describe management
The document discusses the care of surgical patients from pre-operation through recovery. It covers preparing the patient physically and psychologically for surgery, different types of surgeries and anesthesia, and the roles and responsibilities of staff in caring for surgical patients before, during, and after a procedure. Common patient fears are also addressed.
The document discusses improving safety standards for office-based surgery and anesthesia. It notes a lack of uniform regulation has led to increasing complexity of cases performed in office settings. It introduces the Institute for Safety in Office Based Surgery, a non-profit established in 2009 to promote patient safety, develop tools for risk detection, and encourage physician education and evidence-based standards of care. It also references the high-profile case of Joan Rivers' death from complications during an outpatient procedure.
This document discusses patient selection criteria and preoperative assessment and preparation for ambulatory anesthesia. It covers suitable procedures, duration limits, patient characteristics, contraindications, preoperative evaluation, and both nonpharmacologic and pharmacologic preparation. For patient selection, it recommends considering factors like procedure type, duration, medical history, age and contraindications. It also discusses anxiolysis, sedation, preemptive analgesia and preventing nausea for premedication. The goal is to safely perform procedures as outpatients and facilitate early recovery.
A case report of open reduction, internal fixation and platting of clavicle f...iosrjce
IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences is one of the speciality Journal in Dental Science and Medical Science published by International Organization of Scientific Research (IOSR). The Journal publishes papers of the highest scientific merit and widest possible scope work in all areas related to medical and dental science. The Journal welcome review articles, leading medical and clinical research articles, technical notes, case reports and others.
Caudal Anaesthesia for CTEV with Post-Op Analgesia in Paediatric Patient- A C...iosrjce
IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences is one of the speciality Journal in Dental Science and Medical Science published by International Organization of Scientific Research (IOSR). The Journal publishes papers of the highest scientific merit and widest possible scope work in all areas related to medical and dental science. The Journal welcome review articles, leading medical and clinical research articles, technical notes, case reports and others.
anesthesia for obstructed inguinal herniaPramod Sarwa
This document discusses the anesthetic management of pediatric patients presenting with obstructed inguinal hernias. Key points include: children with this condition require urgent resuscitation for dehydration and shock prior to surgery; an NG tube should be placed to decompress the stomach and reduce risk of aspiration; anesthesia induction must include protection of the airway and prevention of regurgitation; and postoperative analgesia should involve a multimodal approach including regional techniques like caudal blocks in addition to systemic medications.
The document discusses a nursing assessment and plan of care for a patient experiencing disturbed sleep patterns due to environmental factors. The nursing diagnosis is disturbed sleep pattern related to environmental noise and light. Short term goals are for the patient to understand their sleep disturbance and verbalize their usual sleep pattern. Interventions include observing the patient's sleep habits, addressing misconceptions, and advising limiting caffeine and taking naps. The objective is to evaluate sleep quality measures and the long term goal is improved sleep and well-being.
The nursing care plan addresses a patient experiencing disturbed sleep patterns related to bipolar disorder. Bipolar disorder involves periods of excitability and alternating periods of depression. The plan involves assessing the patient's sleep patterns after 8 hours and documenting any improvements. Interventions include assessing past sleep patterns, avoiding stimulants before bed, increasing daytime activity, and creating a comfortable sleep environment. Medications may also be administered as ordered to help the patient fall and stay asleep. The overall goal is to promote regular sleep patterns and reduce symptoms.
Mrs. AR, a 62-year-old woman, presented with chest pain and was diagnosed with unstable angina. She had a history of hypertension. Physical examination and investigations found no signs of heart attack. She was treated with medications and discharged after three days in stable condition.
1) First American Bank is considering entering into a credit default swap with Charles Bank International to mitigate CBI's concentration risk from a new $50 million loan to CapEX Unlimited.
2) A credit default swap involves periodic payments by the buyer for credit protection against default by a reference entity. If default occurs, the buyer can sell the entity's bonds to the seller at par value.
3) For a fair semi-annual fee of 0.00333 on a $50 million notional principal CDS, the present value of expected costs equals the present value of expected fee payments.
- Please continue to monitor patient closely and follow up on any labs or tests ordered. Maintain NPO status, IV fluids, medications and rest as directed to support recovery from surgery. Contact medical team promptly if any concerns arise.
This document provides an outline for writing up a surgical long case presentation. It includes sections for history, physical examination, summary, provisional diagnosis, investigations suggested, differential diagnosis, and treatment plan.
The history section details what information should be collected, including chief complaints, history of present illness, past medical history, personal history, family history, and treatment history.
The physical examination section describes the components of general, local, and systemic examinations. It provides examples of what should be assessed for different body systems.
The outline provides guidance on documenting all essential details to form a complete case workup and presentation.
Long case presentation in clinical exams.Imad Hassan
This 61-year-old Hispanic male presented with a 2-week history of dry cough, chest pain, fever, chills, nausea and vomiting. On examination, he was febrile and tachycardic with respiratory distress, rhonchi, and crackles. Chest X-ray showed bilateral pneumonia. The patient's symptoms were not improving with prior antibiotic treatment.
This patient presented with fever, sore throat, joint pain, vomiting and hepatomegaly. Based on her symptoms and physical exam findings, the provisional diagnosis was dengue fever. Dengue virus is transmitted via mosquito bites and causes an immune response that can damage blood vessels and organs. The management focused on supportive care like fluid replacement to prevent complications from dehydration. Tests like complete blood count and ELISA were recommended to confirm the diagnosis.
This is a case study done by me as a part of my in-service education progamme in my institution...hope this may help all nurses who wants to do a case study.
This document summarizes a 28-year-old Indonesian male patient who presented with abdominal pain, fever, and vomiting. On examination, he was found to have jaundice and tenderness in his right hypochondrium and epigastrium. Laboratory tests showed elevated liver enzymes and bilirubin. Ultrasound revealed gallbladder sludge and dilation of the bile ducts due to a large stone. ERCP confirmed choledocholithiasis with multiple stones in the common bile duct. The provisional diagnoses were ascending cholangitis and cholecystitis.
The document discusses guidelines for day surgery. It notes that day surgery has expanded significantly due to advances in surgical and anesthetic techniques. National and international guidelines on patient care, admission/discharge processes, and running day surgery units have helped the growth of day surgery. The latest joint guidelines from 2019 provide recommendations such as thorough pre-assessment, determining fitness based on function rather than physical status, undertaking most surgeries as day cases, and trained multidisciplinary teams. Day surgery provides benefits to both patients, such as early mobility, and hospitals by freeing beds and reducing costs. A wide range of procedures are now suitable as day cases.
The final protocol (v5.3). Notable changes include:
1) Confirmation of audit standard (Page 6).
2) Refinement of inclusion and exclusion criteria (Page 7)
3) Confirmation of audit status (Appendix C)
4) Refinement of required data fields (Page 19) including definitions (Pages 20-25)
This document discusses enhanced recovery care pathways in the NHS. It begins by defining enhanced recovery as a process aimed at continuously improving care across the entire patient journey, with a focus on shared decision making between patients and healthcare providers. It then provides examples of key components of enhanced recovery pathways, such as pre-operative optimization of patient health, minimization of post-operative disabilities through early mobilization and reduced pain medication, and effective communication during care transitions. The document also summarizes the progression of enhanced recovery since its inception, highlights improved patient outcomes including reduced length of hospital stay and readmission rates in areas where enhanced recovery has been implemented, and sets ambitious targets for further expansion of enhanced recovery principles to additional procedures and care settings.
The document summarizes criteria for admission to intensive care units. It outlines that intensive care is appropriate for patients requiring advanced organ system support, such as mechanical ventilation or multiple organ support. The key factors in determining admission are the diagnosis, severity of illness, physiological reserve, prognosis, availability of treatment, and the patient's wishes. Patients should be admitted early before their condition deteriorates irreversibly. Clear referral criteria can help identify at-risk patients and trigger calls for intensive care team assistance.
This document discusses day care surgery performed at a tertiary level hospital in India from 2014-2017. Some key points:
- Over 4,500 day care surgical procedures and 2,757 outpatient procedures were performed. Only 212 (2.9%) day care patients required admission.
- The benefits of day care surgery include lower costs (20-75% less than inpatient), increased access to treatment, and improved patient satisfaction.
- Common low-risk procedures performed included hernia repairs, hydrocele operations, circumcisions, and hemorrhoidectomies. Local anesthesia and short-acting general anesthesia were primarily used.
This document reviews strategies to improve surgical outcomes through multimodal perioperative care approaches. It finds that newer perioperative care approaches have reduced both morbidity and mortality in surgical patients. Specifically, it discusses how regional anesthesia, minimally invasive surgery, intraoperative normothermia, and accelerated rehabilitation programs can reduce stress responses and complications after surgery. The major challenge is developing standardized "fast track" surgical programs using multimodal interventions to achieve pain-free and risk-free perioperative courses.
Surgery Resident clinical seminar on day case surgery presented to the department of surgery, Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital, Okolobiri, Bayelsa State
This report assesses the introduction of two laparoscopic procedures - laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair (LIHR) and laparoscopic assisted hysterectomy (LAH) - in Australia. Literature reviews found insufficient evidence to determine if the procedures provided clear benefits over open surgery. Surveys of 15 Australian hospitals performing LIHR found a lack of consistency in surgeon training and little prospective audit of clinical outcomes. Similarly for LAH, literature reviews revealed inadequacies in study size and quality of evidence. The case studies highlighted variations in record keeping between hospitals, limiting the conclusions that could be drawn. Overall, the report found a need for higher quality studies to properly evaluate these new laparoscopic procedures.
Day surgery, also known as ambulatory surgery, involves performing surgical procedures on patients who are admitted and discharged within 12 hours without an overnight hospital stay. Day surgery offers advantages for both patients and healthcare systems by reducing disruption to patients' lives and providing significant cost savings. A variety of medical, social, and surgical criteria are used to determine patient eligibility for day surgery to minimize risks and ensure safe recovery at home. Successful day surgery requires thorough preoperative patient assessment, optimized anesthesia and postoperative pain management, and monitoring to prevent complications.
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Day surgery offers advantages for both patients and healthcare providers by reducing disruption and costs compared to overnight stays. Success requires efficient coordination across admission, the procedure itself, recovery, and safe discharge within 12 hours. Selection criteria evaluate medical fitness, social support, and whether the planned procedure is suitable for day surgery. Preoperative assessment optimizes patient health while clear discharge standards ensure recovery before leaving. Common day surgery procedures involve areas like abdominal, breast, orthopedic, and vascular operations. Emergency minor cases can also sometimes be managed with same-day admission and discharge.
This document summarizes a quality improvement project conducted at King Abdulaziz Medical City in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia that aimed to reduce rates of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) in intensive care units. A multidisciplinary team implemented a bundle of evidence-based practices shown to reduce VAP, including head of bed elevation, daily sedation vacations, oral care with chlorhexidine, and others. Through multiple tests of changes using the model for improvement methodology over one year, compliance with the bundle increased from 83% to 97% and the VAP rate decreased from 4.0 to 0.8 per 1,000 ventilator days. This translated to a reduction in the number of annual VAP
Daily waiting time management for modern radiation oncology department in Ind...Kanhu Charan
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This document summarizes guidelines for oxygen therapy in post-operative care. It recommends that oxygen therapy is an important part of recovery and can reduce post-operative complications. The summary outlines standards for best practice, such as all patients in recovery receiving oxygen according to local guidelines, and all high-risk patients who could benefit from post-operative oxygen being prescribed it and using it correctly. Audit indicators are proposed to measure adherence to these standards.
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Surgical risk is a form of assessing the clinical conditions and health conditions of a person who will undergo surgery, so that the risks of complications are identified throughout the period before, during and after surgery. It is calculated through a physician’s clinical assessment and the requirement for some tests, but to facilitate the assessment, there are also some protocols which have better directing in medical thinking. Any doctor can make this assessment, but most often it is done by a general practitioner, a cardiologist and an anesthesiologist. In this way, it is possible for each person to receive some attention before the surgery, such as seeking more appropriate tests or performing treatments to reduce the risk.
Surgical Risk Assessment is an Important Factor in any Surgical Treatmentsuppubs1pubs1
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Providing access to interventional
radiology services, seven days a week
Interventional radiology procedures are low volume and have a number of complex challenges. The service configuration at each Trust differs and is dependent on the number and the skill mix of interventional radiology consultants in the Trust. It is a service that supports a wide range of clinical pathways.
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This document provides an overview of a medical surgical nursing course, including learning outcomes, assignments, grading, and textbook recommendations. It then provides a detailed overview of the main lecture on perioperative concepts and nursing management. The main lecture covers preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative nursing care including patient assessment, classifications of surgical procedures, preoperative teaching, and the surgical phases.
The document summarizes new guidelines for oncoplastic breast reconstruction developed by a multidisciplinary writing group in response to findings from the National Mastectomy and Breast Reconstruction Audit. The guidelines establish 25 quality criteria across key areas of preoperative care, surgery, and postoperative management based on audit outcomes. The criteria set standards for areas like infection control and pain management to improve clinical outcomes and patient experience based on the best available evidence. A patient version was also developed to clearly communicate expectations of care. The guidelines aim to enhance multidisciplinary care and support at each stage of a patient's breast reconstruction journey.
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The document provides an executive summary for a business plan for Project E, which will be Botswana's first private psychiatric hospital. It outlines the company's goals of increasing beds and admissions over time. Financial projections show an investment need of $9 million with positive cash flow and returns expected within 6-7 years. The management team is experienced in the mental healthcare field.
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The document discusses bar code medication administration (BCMA) quality assurance efforts at the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) over time. It notes that in 2000, VHA implemented BCMA at all medical centers, and since 2004 has developed closed loop verification procedures, established bar code verification labs, and added bar code quality clauses to contracts. Automated data capture of failed scans began in 2009. This has helped increase wristband and medication scan success rates from around 88-96% in 2009 to around 94-98% in 2011, returning over 60 hours of staff time per day to patient care. The document advocates for supply chain standardization and serialization to further improve safety.
Physician retention and recruitment presents organizational challenges as the healthcare industry faces physician shortages. The top reasons physicians leave organizations are for better pay, a more desirable location, and greater prestige. Few organizations provide leadership development opportunities for physicians like leadership academies or succession planning. On average, physicians stay at an organization for 7 years, with integrated health systems retaining physicians the longest. To attract physicians, organizations commonly offer benefits like paid leave, malpractice insurance, and retirement plans. Developing a positive culture and minimizing politics can also help with retention.
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Binaural hearing using two hearing aids instead of one offers numerous advantages, including improved sound localization, enhanced sound quality, better speech understanding in noise, reduced listening effort, and greater overall satisfaction. By leveraging the brain’s natural ability to process sound from both ears, binaural hearing aids provide a more balanced, clear, and comfortable hearing experience. If you or a loved one is considering hearing aids, consult with a hearing care professional at Ear Solutions hearing aid clinic in Mumbai to explore the benefits of binaural hearing and determine the best solution for your hearing needs. Embracing binaural hearing can lead to a richer, more engaging auditory experience and significantly improve your quality of life.
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Letter to MREC - application to conduct studyAzreen Aj
Application to conduct study on research title 'Awareness and knowledge of oral cancer and precancer among dental outpatient in Klinik Pergigian Merlimau, Melaka'
The facial nerve, also known as cranial nerve VII, is one of the 12 cranial nerves originating from the brain. It's a mixed nerve, meaning it contains both sensory and motor fibres, and it plays a crucial role in controlling various facial muscles, as well as conveying sensory information from the taste buds on the anterior two-thirds of the tongue.
About this webinar: This talk will introduce what cancer rehabilitation is, where it fits into the cancer trajectory, and who can benefit from it. In addition, the current landscape of cancer rehabilitation in Canada will be discussed and the need for advocacy to increase access to this essential component of cancer care.
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Hypertension, also known as high blood pressure, is a serious medical condition that occurs when blood pressure in the body's arteries is consistently too high. Blood pressure is the force of blood pushing against the walls of blood vessels as the heart pumps it. Hypertension can increase the risk of heart disease, brain disease, kidney disease, and premature death.
International Cancer Survivors Day is celebrated during June, placing the spotlight not only on cancer survivors, but also their caregivers.
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The best massage spa Ajman is Chandrima Spa Ajman, which was founded in 2023 and is exclusively for men 24 hours a day. As of right now, our parent firm has been providing massage services to over 50,000+ clients in Ajman for the past 10 years. It has about 8+ branches. This demonstrates that Chandrima Spa Ajman is among the most reasonably priced spas in Ajman and the ideal place to unwind and rejuvenate. We provide a wide range of Spa massage treatments, including Indian, Pakistani, Kerala, Malayali, and body-to-body massages. Numerous massage techniques are available, including deep tissue, Swedish, Thai, Russian, and hot stone massages. Our massage therapists produce genuinely unique treatments that generate a revitalized sense of inner serenely by fusing modern techniques, the cleanest natural substances, and traditional holistic therapists.
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This particular slides consist of- what is Pneumothorax,what are it's causes and it's effect on body, risk factors, symptoms,complications, diagnosis and role of physiotherapy in it.
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Here is a summary of Pneumothorax:
Pneumothorax, also known as a collapsed lung, is a condition that occurs when air leaks into the space between the lung and chest wall. This air buildup puts pressure on the lung, preventing it from expanding fully when you breathe. A pneumothorax can cause a complete or partial collapse of the lung.
1. 2
Day Case and Short Stay Surgery
Published by
The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain & Ireland
The British Association of Day Surgery
May 2011
3. GUIDELINES
Day case and short stay surgery: 2
Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
British Association of Day Surgery
Membership of the Working Party: R. Verma (Chairman), R. Alladi,
I. Jackson, I. Johnston, C. Kumar, R. Page, I. Smith, M. Stocker,
C. Tickner, S. Williams and R. Young
This is a consensus document produced by expert members of a Working Party
established by the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
(AAGBI) and British Association of Day Surgery (BADS). It has been seen and
approved by the Councils of the AAGBI and BADS.
Summary
1 Day surgery is a continually evolving speciality performed in a range of
ways across different units.
2 In recent years, the complexity of procedures has increased with a wider
range of patients now considered suitable for day surgery.
3 Effective pre-operative preparation and protocol-driven, nurse-led
discharge are fundamental to safe and effective day and short stay surgery.
4 Fitness for a procedure should relate to the patient’s health as
determined at pre-operative preparation and not limited by arbitrary
limits such as ASA status, age or body mass index.
5 Patients presenting with acute conditions requiring urgent surgery can be
efficiently and effectively treated as day cases via a semi-elective pathway.
6 Central neuraxial blockade and a range of regional anaesthetic
techniques, including brachial plexus and paravertebral blocks, can be
used effectively for day surgery.
Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed,
Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.
Ó 2011 The Authors
Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland 1
4. 7 Each anaesthetist should develop techniques that permit the patient to
undergo the surgical procedure with minimum stress and maximum
comfort, and optimise his ⁄ her chance of early discharge.
8 Every day surgery unit must have a Clinical Lead with specific interest
in day surgery and whose remit includes the development of local
policies, guidelines and clinical governance.
9 Good quality advice leaflets, assessment forms and protocols are in use
in many centres and are available to other units.
10 Effective audit is an essential component of good care in all aspects of
day and short stay surgery.
11 Enhanced recovery is based on established day surgery principles and
is aimed at improving the quality of recovery after inpatient surgery
such that the patient is well enough to go home earlier and
healthier.
The definition of day surgery in the UK and Ireland is clear: the patient
must be admitted and discharged on the same day, with day surgery as the
intended management. Although still counted as inpatient treatment
(except in the US), 23-h and short stay surgery apply the same principles of
care outlined in this document and can improve the quality of patient care
whilst reducing length of stay.
Since the previous guideline was published in 2005, the complexity of
procedures has increased with a wider range of patients now considered
suitable for day surgery. Despite these advances, the overall rates of day
surgery remain variable across the UK. Whereas the target of 75% of
elective surgery to be performed as day cases from the NHS plan
remains [1], the true picture is difficult to determine, since the only
nationally reported data are limited to 25 procedures [2]. Ten years on,
the advancement of minimally invasive surgery is allowing more
procedures to be performed as day surgery and even higher rates should
be possible.
There was a major drive to promote day surgery around the turn of
this century, but the political focus moved on before all of the lessons
learned were fully implemented [3]. Nevertheless, the recent drive to
reduce length of stay and improve the quality of postoperative recovery
has ensured that day surgery principles are fundamental to modern
patient care. Shortened hospital stays and earlier mobilisation also reduce
the risk of hospital-acquired infections and venous thromboembolism
(VTE).
Guidelines: Day case and short stay surgery
......................................................................................................................................
Ó 2011 The Authors
2 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
5. Recent reports
TheNHS Modernisation Agencyproduced anoperationalguide detailingthe
facilities available in, and the management of, day units [4]. This was further
refined in the Ten High Impact Changes document in which the principle of
treating day surgery as the default option for elective surgery was set out [3].
The NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement has also produced a
document focusing on day case laparoscopic cholecystectomy [5]. Whereas
this document is specific to one procedure, many aspects of the ideal patient
pathway are equally applicable to a wide range of day surgery procedures.
Effective pre-operative assessment and preparation with protocol-driven,
nurse-led discharge are fundamental to safe and effective day and short stay
surgery. Several recent publications provide useful advice on the establish-
ment and running of both services [6–10].
The British Association of Day Surgery has produced a directory of
procedures that provides targets for day and short stay surgery rates for over
200 different procedures [11]. These procedure-specific targets serve as a
focus for clinicians and managers in the planning and provision of short stay
elective surgery and illustrate the high quality of service achievable in
appropriate circumstances.
In March 2010, the Department of Health published the enhanced
recovery guide that extends day surgery principles to inpatient surgery [12].
Selection of patients
Patients may be referred for day surgery from outpatient clinics, accident
and emergency departments or primary care.
Recent advances in surgical and anaesthetic techniques, as well as the
publication of successful outcomes in patients with multiple comorbidities,
have changed the emphasis in day surgery patient selection. It is now
accepted that the majority of patients are appropriate for day surgery unless
there is a valid reason why an overnight stay would be to their benefit. If
inpatient surgery is being considered it is important to question whether any
strategies could be employed to enable the patient to be treated as a day case.
Full-term infants over 1 month are usually appropriate to undergo day
surgery. A higher age limit is advisable for ex-premature infants (60 weeks
post-conceptional age). The significant risk posed by postoperative apnoea
must be considered and infants with recent apnoea episodes, cardiac or
respiratory disease, family history of sudden infant death syndrome and
Guidelines: Day case and short stay surgery
......................................................................................................................................
Ó 2011 The Authors
Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland 3
6. adverse social circumstances should be considered for overnight admission
and close monitoring. Day surgery units should not perform surgery on
children unless they have suitable staff and facilities.
It is recommended that a multidisciplinary approach, with agreed
protocols for patient assessment including inclusion and exclusion criteria
for day surgery, should be agreed locally with the anaesthetic department.
Patient assessment for day surgery falls into three main categories:
Social factors
(a) The patient must understand the planned procedure and postoperative
care and consent to day surgery.
(b) Following most procedures under general anaesthesia, a responsible
adult should escort the patient home and provide support for the first
24 h.
(c) The patient’s domestic circumstances should be appropriate for
postoperative care.
Medical factors
(a) Fitness for a procedure should relate to the patient’s health as
determined at pre-operative assessment and not limited by arbitrary
limits such as ASA status, age or BMI [13–15].
(b) Patients with stable chronic disease such as diabetes, asthma or epilepsy
are often better managed as day cases because of minimal disruption to
their daily routine.
(c) Obesity per se is not a contraindication to day surgery as even morbidly
obese patients can be safely managed in expert hands, with appropriate
resources. The incidence of complications during the operation or in
the early recovery phase increases with increasing BMI. However,
these problems would still occur with inpatient care and have usually
resolved or been successfully treated by the time a day case patient
would be discharged. In addition, obese patients benefit from the
short-duration anaesthetic techniques and early mobilisation associated
with day surgery [16].
Surgical factors
(a) The procedure should not carry a significant risk of serious compli-
cations requiring immediate medical attention (haemorrhage, cardio-
vascular instability).
Guidelines: Day case and short stay surgery
......................................................................................................................................
Ó 2011 The Authors
4 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
7. (b) Postoperative symptoms must be controllable by the use of a
combination of oral medication and local anaesthetic techniques.
(c) The procedure should not prohibit the patient from resuming oral
intake within a few hours.
(d) Patients should usually be able to mobilise before discharge although
full mobilisation is not always essential.
Pre-operative preparation
Pre-operative preparation (formerly known as pre-operative assessment) has
three essential components:
1 To educate patients and carers about day surgery pathways.
2 To impart information regarding planned procedures and postoperative
care to help patients make informed decisions – important information
should be provided in writing.
3 To identify medical risk factors, promote health and optimise the
patient’s condition.
All patients must be assessed by a member of the multidisciplinary team
trained in pre-operative assessment for day surgery. Consultant-led and
nurse-run clinics have proved very successful.
Pre-operative preparation is best performed within a self-contained day
surgery facility, where available. This allows patients and their relatives the
opportunity to familiarise themselves with the environment and to meet
staff who will provide their peri-operative care [17]. One-stop clinics,
where pre-operative preparation is performed on the same day as decision
for surgery, offer significant advantages.
Screening questionnaires (Appendix 1), in conjunction with pre-set
protocols, can offer guidance on appropriate investigations, as routine
pre-operative investigations have no relevance in modern anaesthesia.
Although the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence
(NICE) guidance on pre-operative investigations [18] is widely
used, one recent study showed no difference in the outcomes of day
surgery patients even when all pre-operative investigations were omitted
[19].
Pre-operative preparation clinics can improve efficiency by enabling
early review of the notes of complex cases, ensuring appropriate
investigations are carried out and that patients are referred for specialist
opinion if deemed necessary.
Guidelines: Day case and short stay surgery
......................................................................................................................................
Ó 2011 The Authors
Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland 5
8. Day surgery for urgent procedures
Patients presenting with acute conditions requiring urgent surgery can be
efficiently and effectively treated as day cases via a semi-elective pathway
[20]. After initial assessment many patients can be discharged home and
return for surgery at an appropriate time, either on a day case list or as a
scheduled patient on an emergency list, whereas others can be immediately
transferred to the day surgery service. This reduces the likelihood of
repeated postponement of surgery due to prioritisation of other cases. A
robust day surgery process is key to the success of this service. Some of the
procedures successfully managed in this manner are shown in Table 1
[21–25]. Essential components of an emergency day surgery pathway are:
1 Identification of appropriate procedures.
2 Identification of a theatre list that can reliably accommodate the
procedure (e.g. a dedicated day surgery list or a flexibly run emergency
theatre list).
3 There should be clear pathways for day surgery in place.
4 The condition must be safe to be left untreated for a day or two and
manageable at home with oral analgesia (standardised analgesic pack for
the patient to take home).
5 There should be provision of clear pre-operative patient information,
ideally in writing.
Documentation
Detailed documentation is important within the day surgery environment
as the patient’s experience is often condensed into a few hours. All aspects
Table 1 Types of urgent surgery suitable for day case procedures.
General surgery Gynaecology Trauma Maxillofacial
Incision and drainage
of abscess
Evacuation of retained
products of conception
Tendon repair Manipulation of
fractured nose
Laparoscopic
cholecystectomy
Laparoscopic ectopic
pregnancy
Manipulation
of fractures
Repair of fractured
mandible ⁄ zygoma
Laparoscopic
appendicectomy
Plating of
fractured
clavicle
Temporal artery
biopsy
Guidelines: Day case and short stay surgery
......................................................................................................................................
Ó 2011 The Authors
6 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
9. of treatment and care must be recorded accurately to ensure that each
patient follows an effective and safe pathway.
Documentation should be a continuum from pre-operative preparation
to discharge and subsequent follow-up. Single care plans reflecting a
multidisciplinary approach are favoured in many units. Variations for
specific groups including children and patients undergoing procedures
under local anaesthesia should be available. Procedure-specific care plans
reflecting integrated care pathways may be used for more complex and
challenging cases [26]. Such care plans are also useful for audit and
evaluating outcome.
Patients should be provided with general as well as procedure-specific
information. This should be given in advance of admission to allow time for
questioning and preparation for same day surgery. Verbal comments should
be reinforced with written material. General information should include
practical details about attending the day surgery unit whereas procedure-
specific information should include clinical information about the patient’s
condition and surgical procedure (Appendix 2). The anaesthetic informa-
tion leaflets developed jointly between the AAGBI and the Royal College
of Anaesthetists (RCoA) may also be used [27]. Information for children is
also available [28].
Management and staffing
Every day surgery unit must have a Clinical Lead with specific interest in
day surgery and whose remit includes the development of local policies,
guidelines and clinical governance. A consultant anaesthetist with
management experience is ideally suited to such a role and job plans must
reflect this responsibility [4]. Day surgery must be represented at Board
level [4].
The Clinical Lead should be supported by a day surgery manager who
has responsibility for the day-to-day running of the unit. The manager will
often have a nursing background and should have the knowledge and skills
to make informed decisions and lead on all aspects of day surgery
development.
Nurses, operating department practitioners, physicians’ assistants
(anaesthesia) (PA(A)s), and other ancillary staffing levels will depend
on the design of the facility, casemix, workload and local preferences
and ability to conform to national guidelines. Staff working in these
Guidelines: Day case and short stay surgery
......................................................................................................................................
Ó 2011 The Authors
Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland 7
10. units should be specifically trained in day surgery care. Many units
favour multiskilled staff who have the knowledge and skills to work
within several different areas of the day surgery unit. Efficient use of
resources is best achieved by a well-trained, flexible and multiskilled
workforce [29].
Extended roles facilitate job satisfaction and encourage personal devel-
opment and staff retention. Many health care assistants in the day surgery
unit are now able to perform duties traditionally only undertaken by
qualified nurses [30–32]. Individual units should formulate a staffing
structure that takes into consideration local needs.
Each unit should have a multidisciplinary operational group that oversees
the day-to-day running of the unit, agrees policies and timetables, reviews
operational problems and organises audit strategies.
Facilities
Day surgery should ideally be provided in a self-contained unit that is
functionally and structurally separate from inpatient wards and theatres
[33]. It should have its own reception, consulting rooms, ward, theatre
and recovery areas, together with administrative facilities. The operating
theatre and first stage recovery areas should be equipped and staffed to
the same standards as an inpatient facility, with the exception of the
use of trolleys rather than beds. Several patients per day can occupy the
same trolley space, providing far greater efficiency than on wards where
one day case may occupy a bed for a whole day. Car parking or
short stay drop-off and pick-up areas should be provided adjacent to the
unit.
An alternative to a purpose-built unit is the use of a day case ward with
patients transferred to the main operating theatre. This model allows a more
straightforward transition from overnight stay to day case for complex
procedures as there is little impact on theatre equipment or staffing.
However, day case beds dispersed around many wards do not achieve these
efficiencies, nor do they provide the targeted service that is required to
achieve good outcomes.
Typical day unit opening hours would be 07:00–20:00 Monday to
Friday, but with the increasing complexity of surgery many units now open
until about 22:00.
Guidelines: Day case and short stay surgery
......................................................................................................................................
Ó 2011 The Authors
8 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
11. Many hospitals provide care for day surgery patients who require
anaesthesia in specialised units, e.g. ophthalmology or dentistry. It may not
be possible or appropriate to centralise these services; however, all such
patients should receive the same high standards of selection, preparation,
peri-operative care, discharge and follow-up as those attending dedicated
day surgery facilities.
Facilities should ensure the maintenance of patients’ privacy and
dignity at all times. Side rooms are particularly useful when caring for
patients requiring an increased level of sensitivity, or for those with
special needs.
Children should be cared for in a facility that reflects their emotional
and physical needs, separate from adult patients and conforming to the
standards required by paediatric units. Nursing staff should be skilled in
paediatric day surgical care. Parents and carers, wherever possible, should
be involved in all aspects of care and appropriate facilities provided for
them.
Anaesthetic management
Day surgery anaesthesia should be a consultant-led service. However, as
day surgery becomes the norm for elective surgery, consideration should
be given to education of trainees as recommended by the RCoA. This
requires appropriate training and provision of senior cover, especially in
stand-alone units. Staff grade and associate specialist anaesthetists who
have an interest in day surgery should be encouraged to develop this as a
specialist interest and take an important role in the management of the
unit.
Appropriate selection and patient preparation is crucial for day surgery.
National guidelines for patient monitoring and assistance for the anaesthetist
should be followed [34, 35].
Anaesthetic techniques should ensure minimum stress and maximum
comfort for the patients and should take into consideration the risks and
benefits of the individual techniques. Analgesia is paramount and must be
long acting but, as morbidity such as nausea and vomiting must be
minimised, the indiscriminate use of opioids is discouraged (particularly
morphine). Prophylactic oral analgesics with long-acting non-steroidal anti-
inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) should be given to all patients if not
contraindicated. For certain procedures (e.g. laparoscopic cholecystectomy)
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Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland 9
12. there is evidence that standardised anaesthesia protocols or techniques
improve outcome. Anaesthetists should adhere to such clinical guidelines
where they exist.
Although early mobilisation should be beneficial, extending the range
and complexity of day surgery procedures may increase the risk of VTE.
National guidelines for VTE risk assessment and prophylaxis should be
followed.
Policies should exist for the management of postoperative nausea and
vomiting (PONV) and discharge analgesia. Prophylactic antiemetics are
only recommended in patients with a strong history of PONV, motion
sickness and those undergoing certain procedures such as laparoscopic
sterilisation ⁄ cholecystectomy or tonsillectomy. However, it is important
that PONV is treated seriously once it occurs. Routine use of intravenous
fluids can enhance the patients’ feeling of wellbeing and further reduce
PONV [36].
Regional anaesthesia
Local infiltration and nerve blocks can provide excellent anaesthesia and
pain relief after day surgery. Patients may safely be discharged home with
residual sensory or motor blockade, provided the limb is protected and
appropriate support is available for the patient at home. The expected
duration of the blockade must be explained and the patient must receive
written instructions as to their conduct until normal power and sensation
returns. Infusions of local anaesthesia may also have a place [37]. The use of
ultrasound is increasingly gaining popularity, particularly in upper limb
surgery, and is recognised as a useful tool in several areas of regional
anaesthesia.
Central neuraxial blockade (spinal or caudal) can be useful in day
surgery and is increasing in popularity, although residual blockade may
cause postural hypotension or urinary retention despite the return of
adequate motor and sensory function. These problems can be minimised
by choosing an appropriate local anaesthetic agent or by the use of low-
dose local anaesthetic ⁄ opioid mixtures [38]. Suggested criteria before
attempting ambulation after neuraxial block include the return of
sensation in the perianal area (S4-5), plantar flexion of the foot at pre-
operative levels of strength and return of proprioception in the big toe
[39].
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10 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
13. Sedation is seldom needed but, if used, suggested discharge crite-
ria should be met and the patient must receive an appropriate
explanation.
Oral analgesics should be started before the local anaesthesia begins to
wear off and also given subsequently on a regular basis.
The patient’s hydration should be checked. Concerns about post-dural
puncture headache (PDPH) have limited the use of spinals in day surgery
patients in the past, but the use of smaller gauge (‡ 25-G) and pencil-point
needles has reduced the incidence to 1%. Information about PDPH and
what to do if this occurs should be included in the patient’s discharge
instructions as well as the provision of alternative analgesics. Further
information on the use of spinal anaesthesia in day surgery and examples of
patient information leaflets can be found on the BADS website (http://
www.bads.co.uk).
The current nationally agreed curriculum limits the scope of PA (A)s. On
completion of training they are not qualified to undertake regional
anaesthesia or regional blocks [40].
Postoperative recovery and discharge
Recovery from anaesthesia and surgery can be divided into three phases:
1 First stage recovery lasts until the patient is awake, protective reflexes
have returned and pain is controlled. This should be undertaken in a
recovery area with appropriate facilities and staffing [41]. Use of
modern drugs and techniques may allow early recovery to be complete
by the time the patient leaves the operating theatre, allowing some
patients to bypass the first stage recovery area [42]. Most patients who
undergo surgery with a local anaesthetic block can be fast-tracked in
this manner.
2 Second stage recovery ends when the patient is ready for discharge from
hospital. This should ideally be in an area adjacent to the day surgery
theatre. It should be equipped and staffed to deal with common
postoperative problems (PONV, pain) as well as emergencies (haemor-
rhage, cardiovascular events). The anaesthetist and surgeon (or a deputy)
must be contactable to help deal with problems. Nurse-led discharge
using agreed protocols is appropriate (Appendix 3). Some of the
traditional discharge criteria such as tolerating fluids and passing urine are
no longer enforced. Mandatory oral intake is not necessary and may
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14. provoke nausea and vomiting and delay discharge. Voiding is also not
always required, although it is important to identify and retain patients
who are at particular risk of developing later problems, such as those who
have experienced prolonged instrumentation or manipulation of the
bladder [43]. Protocols may be adapted to allow low-risk patients to be
discharged without fulfilling traditional criteria. Mild postoperative
confusion in the elderly after surgery is common. This is usually
insignificant and should not influence discharge provided social circum-
stances permit; in fact, the avoidance of hospitalisation after minor
surgery is preferred [15, 44]. Patients and their carers should be provided
with written information that includes warning signs of possible
complications and where to seek help. Protocols should exist for the
management of patients who require unscheduled admission, especially
in a stand-alone unit.
3 Late recovery ends when the patient has made a full physiological and
psychological recovery from the procedure. This may take several weeks
or months and is beyond the scope of this document.
Postoperative instructions and discharge
All patients should receive verbal and written instructions on discharge and
be warned of any symptoms that might be experienced. Wherever possible,
these instructions should be given in the presence of the responsible person
who is to escort and care for the patient at home.
Advice should be given not to drink alcohol, operate machinery or drive
for 24 h after a general anaesthetic [45]. More importantly, patients should
not drive until the pain or immobility from their operation allows them to
control their car safely and perform an emergency stop. Procedure-specific
recommendations regarding driving should be available.
All patients should be discharged with a supply of appropriate analgesics
and instructions in their use. Analgesia protocols (Appendix 4) relating
to day surgery case mix should be agreed with the pharmacy. Free
pre-packaged take-home medications should be provided as they are
convenient and prevent delays and unnecessary visits to the hospital
pharmacy.
Discharge summary
It is essential to inform the patient’s general practitioner promptly of
the type of anaesthetic given, the surgical procedure performed and
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12 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
15. postoperative instructions given. Patients should be given a copy of this
discharge summary to have available should they require medical assistance
overnight.
Day surgery units must agree with their local primary care teams how
support is to be provided for patients in the event of postoperative
problems. Best practice is a helpline for the first 24 h after discharge
and to telephone the patient the next day. Telephone follow-up is
highly rated by patients, provides support for any immediate compli-
cations, and is useful for auditing postoperative symptoms and patient
satisfaction.
Audit
Effective audit is an essential component of assessing, monitoring and
maintaining the efficiency and quality of patient care in day surgery units.
Systems should be in place to ensure the routine collection of data regarding
patient throughput and outcomes. There have been a variety of tools
developed to determine patient outcomes. Questionnaires, which rely on
the patients’ completing documentation and returning them to the day
unit, are notoriously inaccurate and response rates are often very low. The
most successful units collect data electronically at all stages of the day
surgery process.
The RCoA’s compendium of audit recipes devotes a section to possible
audits relevant to day surgery [46]. It must be stressed that the most
reliable way of improving service is continuous audit and review of
outcomes rather than one-off snapshots. Information regarding trends in
the patients’ outcomes should be widely distributed amongst the members
of the team.
Audit of day surgery services relate primarily to quality of care and
efficiency. Examples of day surgery processes amenable to audit that have
some measurable outcomes are shown in Table 2.
Audit of patients’ satisfaction should be carried out routinely. A robust
database is helpful; however, the best databases fail to effect change unless
the information is clearly displayed and freely disseminated to the day
surgery users. Monthly graphs and figures detailing all outcomes and trends
should be disseminated to everyone, particularly to key individuals
empowered to influence change.
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16. Teaching and training
The RCoA has placed Day Surgery as a core module in all three
components of anaesthetic training: Basic (year 1 ⁄ 2) [47], Intermediate
(year 3 ⁄ 4) [48] and Higher (year 5 ⁄ 6 ⁄ 7) [49]. It also recommends day
surgery as a specialty for advanced level training [50]. However, formal
day surgery training programmes for anaesthetic (and surgical) trainees are
rare.
The competencies required by the RCoA cover the entire day surgery
process, not simply the anaesthetic component. It is essential to design a
well-structured module that provides training in anaesthesia for all
aspects of day surgery and exposure to the organisational challenges of
running a day surgery unit. To facilitate this, it is recommended that
advanced training should take place in a dedicated day surgery unit [50],
yet few such units exist. It is important to remember that high quality
day surgery requires the experience of senior anaesthetists (and surgeons)
and that although the day surgery unit is an ideal environment for
training junior medical staff, relying on them to deliver the service
results in poorer quality patient outcomes and reduced efficiency
[51, 52].
A list of topics that might be included in a day surgery module is shown
in Appendix 5.
Table 2 Day surgery processes amenable to audit.
Component of process Outcome measure
Booking process Patients failing to attend for surgery ⁄ theatre utilisation
Pre-operative preparation Patients cancelled on the day of surgery ⁄ patients failing to
attend
Admission process Theatre start times
Anaesthesia quality Unplanned admission rates ⁄ postoperative symptoms
Surgery quality Unplanned admission rates ⁄ postoperative symptoms
Recovery Discharge times ⁄ unplanned admission rates ⁄
postoperative symptoms
Discharge process Episodes of unplanned contact with primary care ⁄ out of
hours health services
Postoperative follow-up Episodes of unplanned contact with primary care ⁄ out of
hours health services
Audit Quality and efficiency improvements
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14 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
17. The training delivery should be audited; some suggestions for this are
given in the RCoA audit compendium [46].
The day surgery unit is an excellent environment for surgical and nursing
training and many of the aspects covered above are equally applicable to
surgical and nursing colleagues.
Day surgery in special environments
A number of complex and highly specialist procedures are beginning to
enter the day surgery arena. Awake craniotomy for tumour resection has
been performed as a day case in the UK [53]. In the interventional X-ray
suite, uterine artery embolisation is a day case procedure, whereas
endovascular aneurysm stents and several other procedures are appropriate
for a short stay approach. Optimal care for these procedures should be
developed by those with expertise in day and short stay surgery, working in
collaboration with specialists in the management of the specific procedure.
Many of these procedures are undertaken in challenging environments,
such as X-ray departments. All the accepted standards for delivery of
anaesthesia, assistance for the anaesthetist, minimal monitoring and the
availability of appropriate recovery (post-anaesthesia care unit (PACU))
facilities should be achieved.
Introducing new procedures to day surgery
The successful introduction of new procedures to day surgery depends on
many factors, including the procedure itself and surgical, nursing and
anaesthetic colleagues. It is important to evaluate the procedure while still
performing it as an overnight stay and identify any steps in the process
that require modification to enable it to be performed as a day case, e.g.
timing of postoperative X-rays, modification of intravenous antibiotic
regimens, physiotherapy input and analgesia protocols [54]. A multidis-
ciplinary visit to another unit where the procedure is performed
successfully as a day case can be very helpful. Initially limiting the
procedure to a few colleagues (surgeons and anaesthetists) allows an
opportunity to evaluate and optimise techniques and to implement step
changes so that the patient can be discharged safely and with good
analgesia. Support from community nursing can be helpful, especially in
these early stages. Once the procedure has been successfully moved to the
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18. day surgery setting it can be expanded to include other surgeons and
anaesthetists as appropriate. Clear clinical protocols help to ensure that all
the lessons learned during the evaluation phase are clearly passed on to
colleagues.
Isolated day surgery units
Many day surgery facilities in the UK and Ireland are isolated and the
number of these is increasing. Currently, there is no set absolute
minimum distance between any stand-alone unit and the nearest acute
or associated hospital, although large distances are uncommon. The
commissioning of any new isolated stand-alone unit requires analysis of
its suitability for the provision of intended services. These facilities may
or may not be purpose-built and the Clinical Lead must be aware of this
in managing any risk. Any association with a nearby acute unit should
be reviewed regularly.
Remoteness is a factor to be considered in the delivery of a safe and
efficient service. A minimum of two anaesthetists on site should be
considered at any one time. Prolonged travel time may be an issue for
visiting staff. On-call commitments must be taken into account so as to
avoid accidents and fatigue either in theatre or when travelling.
The operational policy must agree clear management of certain key
issues. These include:
• Management of patients who cannot be discharged home.
• Management of patients with problems after discharge.
• Appropriate cover for the service and patients until they are
discharged.
• Appropriate patient screening and selection with availability of medical
records.
• Management of medical emergencies, e.g. cardiac arrest and major
haemorrhage, and the availability of materials and skilled personnel to
deal with complications when the anaesthetist is in theatre.
• Transfer agreements with local hospitals and intensive care facilities
• Robust, tested communications between the stand-alone unit, the
nearest acute hospital and the ambulance services.
• Teaching, training and supervision and opportunities for research.
This list is not meant to be exhaustive but gives guidance to some of the
important areas that require consideration.
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16 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
19. Short stay surgery and enhanced recovery
New approaches to the assessment and management of patients undergoing
more complex surgery are being used to improve the quality of recovery,
reduce the incidence of postoperative complications and reduce lengths of
stay. Many of these techniques are based on the wider application of well-
established day surgery principles and are aimed at improving the quality of
recovery so that the patient is well enough to go home sooner. These
strategies are variously called enhanced recovery, fast-track [55], accelerated
or rapid recovery. For any surgical operation there is a large variation in
average lengths of stay in hospitals across the UK and Ireland. Increasing
numbers of hospitals are focusing on the short stay pathway and plan to
manage the majority of their elective patients with stays of fewer than 72 h.
To achieve the maximum benefit from this, hospitals are developing 24-h
stay facilities (some as part of their existing day units) and are embracing
these principles.
Principles of enhanced recovery
Enhanced recovery is the outcome of applying a range of multimodal
strategies that are designed to prepare and optimise patients before, during
and after surgery, ensuring prompt recovery and discharge [12]. Most of
these principles are already well established in day surgery, which can be
considered the ultimate example of enhanced recovery. Anaesthetic
departments should play a major role in this as they can contribute
extensively to all phases of the patients’ management. Many of these
interventions are derived from day surgery.
Pre-operative factors
Pre-operative preparation of the patient plays a crucial role and identifies
additional risk factors and ensures that their medical condition is
optimised. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing provides further information
to enable anaesthetists to discuss these risks with their patients and ensure
that high-risk patients are counselled appropriately. An appropriate level
of intensive or high dependency care can also be put in place if
necessary. Patients and their carers should receive a careful explanation
about the procedure and what will happen to them at every stage of the
peri-operative pathway. This includes resumption of food, drink,
mobilisation and information about discharge and when this is likely
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20. to take place. As with day surgery, the provision of written information
is vital.
Patients should usually be admitted on the day of surgery with minimal
starvation times (i.e. 3 h for fluids) and consideration given to the use of
oral carbohydrate loading. Analgesia with paracetamol and NSAIDs
should be started pre-operatively if not contraindicated, and hypothermia
avoided.
Intra-operative factors
Minimally invasive surgery should be combined with use of regional
anaesthesia where possible. Thoracic epidurals or other regional anaesthetic
techniques should normally be used for abdominal surgery in patients likely
to require more than oral analgesia postoperatively. Long acting opioids,
nasogastric tubes and surgical drains should be avoided. Intra-operative fluid
therapy should be goal directed to avoid sodium ⁄ fluid overload and
attention should be paid to maintaining normothermia. Anaesthetic
techniques are otherwise similar to day surgery with the expectation that
patients will mobilise and eat ⁄ drink later in the day.
Postoperative factors
Effective analgesia that minimises the risk of PONV and allows early
mobilisation plays a vital role in enhanced recovery. Systemic opioids
should be avoided where possible and regular oral (or intravenous) analgesia
with simple analgesics (paracetamol and NSAIDs) should be used. For more
invasive procedures, epidural analgesia should be maintained in the
postoperative period. Hydration should be maintained with intravenous
fluids but discontinued as soon as the patient returns to oral fluids, and
PONV should be treated aggressively using a multimodal approach to
therapy.
The patient should be mobilised within 24 h. They should be aware and
encouraged to meet milestones for mobilisation, drinking and eating. This
requires active involvement from both the medical and nursing teams in the
immediate postoperative period. The provision of a specified dining room,
with access to high calorie drinks and where meals can be taken, encourages
the patient to mobilise.
There should be a target discharge date set for which the staff, patients
and relatives should aim, and as in day surgery the discharge should be a
nurse-led process and not dependent on consultant review.
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18 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
21. The patient’s perspective
A Mayo Clinic study in 2006 showed that patients want their doctors to be
confident, empathetic, humane, personal, forthright, respectful and thor-
ough [56]. Interestingly, there was no mention of competence, implying
that patients inherently believe their doctors to be competent. A survey
carried out by MORI on behalf of the RCoA in May 2000 found that 35%
of the general public did not believe that anaesthetists were medically
qualified doctors [57]. Hence, there is a credibility gap that anaesthetists
need to address. It is important to ensure that patients are made aware that
anaesthetists are highly qualified professional doctors. The patient infor-
mation leaflets produced by the AAGBI and the RCoA can be useful in this
regard.
It is important to realise that to most patients, anaesthesia means general
anaesthesia with loss of consciousness during the procedure, and the patient
sees this as ceding total control to someone else. Nobody is really
completely comfortable with this. The psychology of surrendering control
can result in patient attitudes that may not be explicitly communicated to
the anaesthetist. This can cause a lot of stress and anxiety. Patients are
therefore worried about:
• Never waking up.
• Dying during an operation.
• Waking up during surgery.
• Feeling pain and possibly not being able to make anyone else aware.
In a recent study [58], the top three were identified as being of most
concern to day case patients. The same study highlighted that the factor that
alleviated most anxiety was the presence of a partner or friend, especially
during recovery. Importantly, patients were more receptive to anaesthetists’
visiting and giving information about the procedure than to information
provided by the nursing staff.
Other concerns that are relatively common to patients having a general
anaesthetic are also associated with loss of control:
• Embarrassment about perceived loss of control of bodily functions e.g.
wetting the bed, or saying something inappropriate while still drowsy.
• Nausea and vomiting.
It is important for the anaesthetist to offer reassurances, as this has the
greatest impact compared with delegating this responsibility to the nursing
staff. Apprehensive patients don’t easily absorb big words. Explanations
should be given in simple terms, avoiding jargon and not using emotive
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22. language. This is particularly important in helping children understand the
planned procedure and what is to follow. Information provided in writing
before the day of surgery also helps.
A patient about to undergo elective surgery often has contradicting
feelings. On the one hand they are glad that the surgery will cure their
medical problem and provide a life enhancing experience. On the other
hand they are riddled with innumerable anxieties and although it might
seem routine and straightforward to the doctor, the patient will inevitably
view it all very differently. No patient expects surgery to be actually
enjoyable, but what is most appreciated is information delivered by a
respected, highly trained professional, who is empathetic and regards the
patient as a person and not merely as a statistic.
An information leaflet designed to help patients prepare themselves for
day surgery is available on the BADS website [59].
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Recovery. London: AAGBI, 2002.
42 Lubarsky DA. Fast track in the post-anesthesia care unit: unlimited possibilities?
Journal of Clinical Anesthesia 1996; 8: 70S–2S.
Guidelines: Day case and short stay surgery
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22 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
25. 43 Pavlin DJ, Pavlin EG, Fitzgibbon DR, Koerschgen ME, Plitt TM. Man-
agement of bladder function after outpatient surgery. Anesthesiology 1999; 91:
42–50.
44 Ward B, Imarengiaye C, Peirovy J, Chung F. Cognitive function is minimally
impaired after ambulatory surgery. Canadian Journal of Anesthesia 2005; 52:
1017–21.
45 Chung F, Kayumov L, Sinclair DR, Edward R, Moller HJ, Shapiro CM. What
is the driving performance of ambulatory surgical patients after general
anesthesia? Anesthesiology 2005; 103: 951–6.
46 Royal College of Anaesthetists. Raising the Standard: A Compendium of Audit
Recipes. London: RCoA, 2006.
47 The Royal College of Anaesthetists. CCT in Anaesthetics. Annex B. Basic Level
Training, 2nd edn. London: RCoA, 2010.
48 The Royal College of Anaesthetists. CCT in Anaesthetics. Annex C. Intermediate
Level Training, 2nd edn. London: RCoA, 2010.
49 The Royal College of Anaesthetists. CCT in Anaesthetics. Annex D. Higher Level
Training, 2nd edn. London: RCoA, 2010.
50 The Royal College of Anaesthetists. CCT in Anaesthetics. Annex E. Advanced
Level Training, 2nd edn. London: RCoA, 2010.
51 Royal College of Surgeons of England. Commission on the Provision of Surgical
Services. Guidelines for Day Case Surgery. London: HMSO, 1992.
52 Hanousek J, Stocker ME, Montgomery JE. The effect of grade of anaesthetist on
outcome after day surgery. Anaesthesia 2009; 64: 150–5.
53 Weidmann C, Grundy P. Day-case awake craniotomy for tumour resection.
Journal of One-day Surgery 2008; 18: 45–7.
54 Hamer C, Holmes K, Stocker M. A generic process for transferring procedures
to the day case setting: the Torbay hospital proposal. Journal of One-day Surgery
2008; 18: 9–12.
55 Wilmore DW, Kehlet H. Recent advances: management of patients in fast track
surgery. British Medical Journal 2001; 322: 473–6.
56 Li JT. The quality of caring. Mayo Clinic Proceedings 2006; 81: 294–6.
57 Corrado M, Carluccio A. Perceptions of anaesthetists – a survey of the general
public research study conducted for the Royal College of Anaesthetists for
National Anaesthesia Day. Royal College of Anaesthetists Newsletter 2000; 51:
319–21 http://www.rcoa.ac.uk/docs/newsletter2000-51.pdf (accessed 03 ⁄ 01 ⁄
2011).
58 Mitchell M. General anaesthesia and day-case patient anxiety. Journal of Advanced
Nursing 2010; 66: 1059–71.
59 Advice for Patients. http://www.bads.co.uk/bads/joomla/images/stories/
downloads/generaladvice.pdf, 2010 (accessed 03 ⁄ 01 ⁄ 2011).
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Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland 23
26. Further reading
1 Association for Perioperative Practice. Staffing for Patients in the
Perioperative setting. Harrogate: AfPP, 2008.
2 Department of Health. Getting the right start. National Service Framework
for Children – Standard for Hospital Services. London: DoH, 2003.
3 Department of Health and Children. Children First: National Guidelines
for the Protection and Welfare of Children. London: DoH, 1999.
4 Health Service Executive. HSE National Service Plan 2010. Dublin:
HSE, 2010.
5 Jakobson J. Anaesthesia for Day Case Surgery. New York: Oxford
University Press, 2009.
6 Lemos P, Jarrett P, Philip B eds. Day Surgery Development and Practice.
Porto: International Association for Ambulatory Surgery, 2006.
7 National Association for the Welfare of Children in Hospital. Caring for
children in the Health Services. Just for the Day. London: The Stationery
Office, 1991.
8 National Leadership and Innovation Agency for Healthcare. Day
Surgery in Wales: a guide to good practice. Cardiff: The Welsh Assembly
Government, 2004.
9 NHS Estates. HBN 26 Facilities for Surgical Procedures. Volume 1.
London: The Stationery Office, 2004.
10 NHS Management Executive Value for Money Unit. Day Surgery.
Making it happen. London: HMSO, 1991.
11 NHS Modernisation Agency. National Good Practice Guidelines on
Pre-operative Assessment for Day Surgery. The Stationery Office,
2002.
12 Raeder J. Clinical Ambulatory Anesthesia. New York: Cambridge
University Press, 2010.
13 Scottish Health Planning Note 52: Accommodation for Day Care: Part
1: Day surgery unit. Glasgow: Health Facilities Scotland, 2001.
14 Smith I, ed. Day Care Anaesthesia. Fundamentals of Anaesthesia Acute
Medicine Series. London: BMJ Books, 2000.
15 The Office of the Comptroller and Auditor General. Accounts of
Public Services 2008. Dublin, Government of Ireland, 2009. http://
www.audgen.gov.ie/documents/annualreports/2008/Appropriation_
Account_2008Rev1.pdf (accessed 11 ⁄ 01 ⁄ 2011).
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24 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
27. Appendix 1
Sample screening questionnaire for use in day surgery. University Hospital of
North Staffordshire, with permission.
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28. Guidelines: Day case and short stay surgery
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26 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
29. Appendix 2
Sample patient information sheet for use in day surgery. Royal Surrey County
Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, with permission.
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30. Appendix 3
Discharge checklist for day surgery. Reproduced from: British Association
of Day Surgery. Nurse Led Discharge. London: BADS, 2009, with
permission.
Criteria Yes No N ⁄ A Initials Details
Vital signs stable
Orientated to time, place person
Passed urine (if applicable)
Able to dress walk (where appropriate)
Oral fluids tolerated (if applicable)
Minimal pain
Minimal bleeding
Minimal nausea ⁄ vomiting
Cannula removed
Responsible escort present
Has carer for 24-h post op
Written verbal post op instructions
Knows who to contact in an emergency
Follow up appointment
Removal of sutures required?
Referrals made
Dressings supplied
Patient copy of GP letter
Carbon copy of consent
Sick certificate
Has take home medication Next Dose:
Information leaflet for tablets
Post op phone call required
Discharged by: Nurse’s Signature
___________________________________________________
Date ⁄ Time ____________ Print Name
___________________________________________________
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28 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
31. Appendix 4a
Acute pain protocol for adult surgery.
Pain intensity Discharge medication
Doctor’s signature
(sign one box only)
A None None
B Mild Paracetamol 1 g qds
C Moderate Paracetamol 1 g qds
Plus
Ibuprofen 600 mg qds
C* Moderate
(NSAID intolerant)
Paracetamol 500 mg ⁄ codeine
30 mg 1–2 tabs qds
D Severe Paracetamol 500 mg ⁄ codeine
30 mg 1–2 tabs qds
Plus
Ibuprofen 600 mg qds
D* Severe
(NSAID intolerant)
Paracetamol 1 g qds
Plus
Oral morphine 20 mg qds
Appendix 4b
Pain categories for common procedures in the day surgery unit, to be used
in conjunction with the above.
A B C D
EUA ears
Cystoscopy
Restorative
dentistry
Cataract surgery
Grommets ⁄
T-tube removal ⁄
insertion
Prostate biopsy
Sebaceous cyst surgery
Sigmoidoscopy
Skin lesion surgery
Urethral surgery
Anal surgery
Apicectomy
Arthroscopy
Axillary clearance
Breast lumps
Dupuytren’s contracture
Carpal tunnel
decompression
Cervical ⁄ vulval surgery
Hysteroscopy ⁄ DC
Middle ear surgery
MUA ± steroid injection
Vaginal sling
Varicose vein surgery
Vasectomy
Non-wisdom tooth
extraction
ACL reconstruction
Circumcision
Endometrial ablation
Laparoscopy
Haemorrhoidectomy
Hernia repair
Joint fusions ⁄ osteotomy
Shoulder surgery
Squint surgery
Testicular surgery
Tonsillectomy
Wisdom tooth extraction
Dental clearance
EUA ⁄ MUA, examination ⁄ manipulation under anaesthesia; ACL, anterior cruciate ligament
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32. Appendix 5
Suitable topics for a training module in day case anaesthesia.
1 Patient selection and preparation:
• The role of patient selection in day surgery
• Medical, social and surgical factors
• Unit protocols for patient selection
• The role of pre-operative preparation in day surgery
• Instructions for ⁄ preparation of patients for day surgery
• Management of patients with complex medical conditions
• Recognition of patients who are unsuitable for day surgery
2 Anaesthetic techniques for day surgery:
• General anaesthetic techniques
• Antiemetic therapy
• Analgesia including the role of nerve blockade
• Fluid therapy
• Airway management
3 Surgical techniques appropriate for day surgery:
• Surgical advances enabling procedures to transfer to day surgery
• Limitations of day surgery
• Risks ⁄ concerns
4 Recovery assessment and discharge criteria:
• Adequacy of analgesia
• Fitness for discharge
• Role of early intervention in prevention of unplanned admissions
• Instructions for patients
• Discharge medication
5 Postoperative follow up and audit:
• Value of postoperative follow-up to patients and the unit
• Use of information technology for audit of outcomes and service development
6 Team working:
• The day unit as a multidisciplinary team
7 Children in the day surgery unit:
• National Service Framework for Children’s requirements for provision of children’s services
• Preparation of children for surgery
8 Management of a day surgery unit:
• Role of day surgery managers
• Role of day surgery within the trust
• Government’s agenda for day surgery
• Booking processes for day surgery
• Knowledge of local and national day surgery performance
• Advances and controversies in day surgery
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30 Anaesthesia Ó 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
33. The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain Ireland
21 Portland Place, London, W1B 1PY
Tel: 020 7631 1650
Fax: 020 7631 4352
Email: info@aagbi.org
Website: www.aagbi.org
The British Association of Day Surgery
35-43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London, WC2A 3PE
Tel: 020 7973 0308
Fax: 020 7973 0314
Email: bads@bads.co.uk
Website: www.bads.co.uk