Affiliation:
1. Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia
Abstract
Outcome has been measured for 6000 consecutive procedures in a major public teaching hospital day surgery unit. The unanticipated hospital admission rate was 1.34% and surgery-related admissions (0.95%) exceeded those related to anaesthesia (0.13%). Perioperative complications related to surgery (1:105) were more frequent than those related to anaesthesia (1:176) and pre-existing medical problems (1:500). Anaesthesia-related complications were more frequent with general anaesthesia (1:114) than with local anaesthesia plus sedation (1:780) or regional anaesthesia (1:180). Recovery times after general anaesthesia were longer than after other anaesthetic techniques but did not correlate with patient age (r = 0.04; P = 0.02) and only weakly correlated with procedure duration (r = 0.21; P < 0.01). At early follow-up, 4.0% of patients had presented to a local medical practitioner and 3.1% to a hospital accident and emergency service, usually for minor problems. Take home analgesia was adequate for 95% of patients and 98.9% were happy with the day surgery service. Day surgery in a teaching hospital can provide satisfactory outcome, with low complication rates, high patient acceptance and low community support requirements after patient discharge.
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine