daycaresurgery-230407065622-1aa4738f.pptx

ShreyaSalvi12 62 views 28 slides Jul 14, 2024
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About This Presentation

Day care surgery ppt


Slide Content

DAY CARE SURGERY

DAY CARE SURGERY Day-case surgery / Ambulatory surgery / Outpatient surgery / Same-day surgery / Come-and-go surgery Definition – Admission and discharge of a patient for a specific procedure within the 12-hour working day. Patient pathway; NOT a surgical procedure. Extends from patient first contact to final discharge.

TERMS AND DEFINATIONS Outpatient surgery – not admitted to a ward facility Procedure room surgery – not requiring full sterile theatre facilities Same-day surgery – admitted and discharged within 12-hour Overnight stay – 23-hour stay with early morning discharge Short-stay surgery – admission of up to 72 hours

ADVANTAGES Reduction of stress Decreased medical costs – doesn’t need a hospital stay Increased availability of beds for patients who require hospitalization Protection of immunocompromised patients from hospital-acquired infections Avoidance of disruption of the family unit by hospitalization.

ELECTIVE DAY SURGERY PATHWAY For Success Each component is required to be safe and efficient Performed in sequence

UNPLANNED OVERNIGHT ADMISSION Minimized by: Patient fit for the procedure Procedure itself is achievable as a day case Procedure is scheduled early on the operating list to allow safe recovery and discharge Home environment can support a post-operative ambulatory patient.

MODELS OF CARE Office-based care Stand-alone day surgery facilities Self-contained integrated day surgery facilities Integrated day and short-stay surgery facilities

SELECTION CRITERIA A. MEDICAL CRITERIA 1. Age No upper age limit Physiological status – better determinant of day-care surgery success 2. Comorbidity ASA classification – crude evaluation of chronic health ASA I and II – stand-alone unit ASA III and above – hospital integrated unit

SELECTION CRITERIA A. MEDICAL CRITERIA 3. Diabetes Well-controlled Type 1 and Type 2 DM – good candidates Associated with potentially severe comorbidities Success – ensuring these patients return to normal eating and drinking and managing their own diabetes as quickly as possible postoperatively

SELECTION CRITERIA A. MEDICAL CRITERIA 4. Epilepsy Well-controlled epilepsy – managed as normal patients Regular medication should not be omitted Poorly controlled epilepsy – careful review and discussion with the medical and anaesthetic teams Suitable home care = Suitable day surgery

SELECTION CRITERIA A. MEDICAL CRITERIA 5. Obesity Intraoperative and postoperative complications Common comorbidities associated with obesity Selected and optimized patients – BMI up to 40 (surface procedures) and 38 (laparoscopic procedures) are acceptable in advanced units 6. Anticoagulants For – atrial fibrillation, previous thromboembolism Should be discontinued before surgery Discussed with cardiologist and risk involved explained to the patients

SELECTION CRITERIA B. SOCIAL CRITERIA Safe and comfortable discharge – patient to be accompanied by a responsible and physically able adult to remain with them overnight Home circumstances Toilet facility Means to contact the hospital Journey time to home ≤ 1 hour (the comfort of the journey - more relevant)

SELECTION CRITERIA C. SURGICAL CRITERIA Procedures up to 2 hours Recognized day surgery procedure Degree of surgical trauma – a procedure with abdominal and thoracic cavity entry confined to minimal access technique Main requirement - Suitable control of pain and ability to drink and eat in a reasonable time

PREOPERATIVE ASSESSMENT Evaluation and optimization of patient’s fitness for surgery Performed by specialist consultants and anaesthetists Basic health screening – BMI, BP, past medical history & current medications Appropriate preoperative investigation Verbal and written information to patient and carer – admission, operation and discharge Performed early – to allow time to optimize health problem

PERIOPERATIVE MANAGEMENT Scheduling Anesthesia and analgesia Postoperative complications

SCHEDULING Major surgery – scheduled early (allow maximum recovery time) General anaesthesia cases → regional and local anaesthesia cases Mixing day cases with inpatient cases – day cases should go first Mixing day cases with critical inpatient cases – not advisable

ANAESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA Successful day surgery anaesthesia – multimodal anaesthesia Preoperative period – full oral doses of PCM and NSAIDs Intraoperative period Inhalation agents TIVA using propofol – reduces PONV Short-acting opioids – Fentanyl [if Morphine used – small doses (under 0.1mg/kg)] Long acting LA- Bupivacaine

ANAESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA Postoperative Pain level routinely monitored Further dose of PCM, fentanyl, low dose morphine Patient should be comfortable prior to return to the ward

POSTOPERATIVE COMPLICATIONS Proactive monitoring before discharge Same as that of normal surgery ( Haemorrhage , PONV, postoperative pain) Most common anaesthetic -related cause of postoperative admission Inadequate recovery from anaesthesia Uncontrolled nausea and vomiting Inadequate pain control

ELECTIVE DAY SURGERY REQUIREMENTS FOR SUCCESSFUL DAY SURGERY Minimal access technique Good haemostasis Avoidance of unnecessary tissue handling and tension

EMERGENCY DAY SURGERY

EMERGENCY DAY SURGERY Traditional day surgery selection criteria are ignored Clinical judgement – whether the patients are appropriate for day surgery Absolute contraindications – systemic sepsis, unstable diabetes, major comorbidities

DISCHARGE Postoperative review by the surgical team Suitable supply of analgesics Discharge by trained day-surgery nurses using strict discharge criteria

DISCHARGE CRITERIA Vital signs stable for at least 1 hour Correct orientation as to time, place and person Adequate pain control with the supply of oral analgesia Understands how to use oral analgesia supplied Ability to dress and walk, where appropriate Minimal nausea, vomiting or dizziness Has taken oral fluids

DISCHARGE CRITERIA Minimal bleeding or wound drainage Has passed urine Has a responsible adult take them home Has a carer at home for the next 24 hours Written and verbal instructions are given about postoperative care Knows when to come back for follow up Emergency contact number supplied

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