Olivia Nelson, T. Quinn, Alexander F. Arriaga, D. Hepner, S. Lipsitz, Zara Cooper, A. Gawande, A. Bader
{"title":"A Model for Better Leveraging the Point of Preoperative Assessment: Patients and Providers Look Beyond Operative Indications When Making Decisions.","authors":"Olivia Nelson, T. Quinn, Alexander F. Arriaga, D. Hepner, S. Lipsitz, Zara Cooper, A. Gawande, A. Bader","doi":"10.1213/XAA.0000000000000274","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Previous literature on preoperative evaluation focuses on the impact on the day of surgery cancellations and delays; however, the framework of cancellations and delays at the time of the elective outpatient preoperative anesthesia visit has not been categorized. We describe the current model in the preoperative clinic at Brigham and Women's Hospital, examining the pattern of cancellations at the time of this preoperative visit and the framework used for categorizing the issues involved. Looking at this broader framework is important in an era of patient-centered care; we seek to identify targets to modify the preoperative assessment and adequately assess and capture the spectrum of issues involved. Elective cases evaluated in the preoperative clinic were reviewed over 10 months. Characteristics of cancelled and noncancelled cases were compared. In-depth analysis of issues related to cancellation was done; 1-year follow-up was completed. Cancellation patterns included categories encompassing clinical, financial, alignment with patient values and goals, compliance, and social issues. The period of preoperative assessment can therefore be leveraged to review a number of domains that can adversely affect surgical outcomes and improve patient-centered care. Also, our framework allows the institution to benchmark these patterns over time; increases in cancellations at the time of the preoperative anesthesia clinic visit for specific categories can prompt an opportunity to examine and improve preoperative workflow.","PeriodicalId":6824,"journal":{"name":"A&A Case Reports ","volume":"54 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-04-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"15","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"A&A Case Reports ","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1213/XAA.0000000000000274","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 15
Abstract
Previous literature on preoperative evaluation focuses on the impact on the day of surgery cancellations and delays; however, the framework of cancellations and delays at the time of the elective outpatient preoperative anesthesia visit has not been categorized. We describe the current model in the preoperative clinic at Brigham and Women's Hospital, examining the pattern of cancellations at the time of this preoperative visit and the framework used for categorizing the issues involved. Looking at this broader framework is important in an era of patient-centered care; we seek to identify targets to modify the preoperative assessment and adequately assess and capture the spectrum of issues involved. Elective cases evaluated in the preoperative clinic were reviewed over 10 months. Characteristics of cancelled and noncancelled cases were compared. In-depth analysis of issues related to cancellation was done; 1-year follow-up was completed. Cancellation patterns included categories encompassing clinical, financial, alignment with patient values and goals, compliance, and social issues. The period of preoperative assessment can therefore be leveraged to review a number of domains that can adversely affect surgical outcomes and improve patient-centered care. Also, our framework allows the institution to benchmark these patterns over time; increases in cancellations at the time of the preoperative anesthesia clinic visit for specific categories can prompt an opportunity to examine and improve preoperative workflow.
先前关于术前评估的文献主要关注对手术取消和延迟的影响;然而,取消和延迟的框架,在时间的选择性门诊术前麻醉访问尚未分类。我们描述了布里格姆妇女医院(Brigham and Women's Hospital)术前诊所的当前模式,检查了术前就诊时的取消模式,以及用于对所涉及问题进行分类的框架。在一个以患者为中心的医疗时代,审视这个更广泛的框架是很重要的;我们寻求确定目标,以修改术前评估,并充分评估和捕获所涉及的问题范围。在术前诊所评估的选择性病例在10个月内进行回顾。比较取消和未取消病例的特点。对取消相关问题进行了深入分析;随访1年。取消模式包括临床、财务、与患者价值观和目标的一致性、依从性和社会问题等类别。因此,术前评估期间可以用来审查一些可能对手术结果产生不利影响的领域,并改善以患者为中心的护理。此外,我们的框架允许机构对这些模式进行基准测试;在特定类别的术前麻醉门诊就诊时取消的增加可以提示检查和改进术前工作流程的机会。