Systematic assessment of care pathways may identify areas of potential improvement beyond that generated by traditional outcome measures alone. This approach was used to audit a single-surgeon's practice of pulmonary resection w182 patients over 21 months, median age of 69 (range 18-86) yearsx by choosing 10 gold standards in three areas of care. Preoperative: 1) Percentage cancer patients undergoing PET scan prior to surgery, 2) Percentage of patients with predicted postoperative FEV1 (ppoFEV1) <40% who had gas transfer (DLCO) measured. Perioperative: 3) Percentage of operations postponed, 4-5) Percentage of cancer patients undergoing anatomical resections and systematic lymph node excision, 6) Rate of exploratory thoracotomies. Postoperative: 7-8) Risk-adjusted mortality according to thoracoscore and ESOS.01, 9) Percentage patients admitted to intensive care unit (ICU), and 10) Percentage patients discharged directly home from our unit. Postoperative mortality (2.2%), ICU admission (4%), exploratory thoracotomy (2.7%), and home discharge (98%) fared within standards. Only 57% of patients with a ppoFEV 1 <40% had DLCO tested, and eight cases (4.4%) were postponed on the day of surgery. Analysis of the processes of care identified areas for improvement (preoperative preparation of patients, theatre cancellations and intraoperative lymph node management) even in a practice with satisfactory risk-adjusted results.
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.
CITATION STYLE
Martin-Ucar, A. E., Medouye, A., Deacon, S. E., Muhibullah, N., Lau, K., Bennett, J., & Annamaneni, R. (2010). Systematic evaluation of quality of care provided to patients undergoing pulmonary surgery helps to identify areas for improvement. In Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery (Vol. 10, pp. 394–398). https://doi.org/10.1510/icvts.2009.214221