Management Strategies for Ambulatory Surgical Patients Paying Off
Cardiac and respiratory complications, along with other problems not directly related to surgery, were the most common causes of unplanned hospital admissions after ambulatory surgery, according to a retrospective study at Duke University Medical Center, in Durham, N.C. Surgical-related reasons, including complications or necessary additional procedures, were the next most common. The study was presented at the 2011 annual meeting of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA; abstract 849).
The investigators reviewed the charts of 28,456 patients who underwent ambulatory surgery between May 2006 and May 2010 at a freestanding surgical center adjacent to Duke University. They included all cases admitted directly after the procedure and cases from the ambulatory center’s 23-hour observation unit. Demographic variables were obtained from the medical center’s electronic records; hospital charges attributed to inpatient admissions were pulled from an internal financial database.
During the study period, unplanned hospital admissions accounted for 127 patients, a rate of 0.45%, which is comparable to previously published findings. The average age of the patients was 48 years; average body mass index was 30 kg/m2. Fifty-one percent were classified as ASA physical status I/II; the remainder of the patients were classified as ASA III/IV and were obese.
Medical-related issues accounted for 32% of admissions (41 cases) and were associated with the highest total charges ($356,392); treating cardiac complications was the most expensive ($177,283). Surgical-related reasons accounted for 22% of admissions (28 cases) and were associated with the next highest charges ($311,311); treating surgical complications was the most expensive ($137,367).
Other reasons for admission included need for additional pain control (27 cases), postoperative antibiotics (13 cases), postoperative bleeding (11 cases), anesthesia-related complications (four cases) and adverse drug reactions (three cases).
Steve Melton, MD, assistant professor of anesthesiology at Duke and a co-author of the study, said the results were more confirmatory than surprising. “It shows we’re doing a better job of identifying appropriate patients for ambulatory surgery, and identifying and managing risk factors beforehand,” Dr. Melton said. Risk identification should be a team approach from surgeons and anesthesiologists, although “some of this stuff you can’t always prepare for,” he added.