(Press-News.org) The Perioperative Surgical Home (PSH) model consistently and significantly improves quality of care for patients and reduces health care costs, reports a first-of-its-kind, large-scale literature review of the PSH in the United States and abroad. The review, published online this month in Milbank Quarterly, provides further evidence to support the benefits, and encourage the adoption, of the PSH model.
"There is a global push for more rigorously coordinated and integrated management of surgical patients to enhance patient satisfaction and improve quality of care and outcomes, while cutting costs," said Thomas R. Miller, Ph.D., M.B.A., co-author of the review and director of health policy research at the American Society of Anesthesiologists® (ASA®), Schaumburg, Ill. "Whether in the U.S. or overseas, our review found that the PSH model of care is highly effective at achieving these measures by reducing cancellations and surgical delays, lowering complication rates and readmissions, and shortening hospital stays."
The PSH is a patient-centered, physician-led, multidisciplinary team-based model of coordinated care. In a PSH, a patient's entire surgical experience - preoperative, intraoperative, postoperative and post-discharge - is fully coordinated and treated as one continuum of care. The PSH model emphasizes the cost-efficient use of resources as well as lead physician, multi-specialty team and patient-shared decision-making.
Interestingly, both U.S. and international studies stressed the importance of the role of physician anesthesiologists in perioperative patient management and PSH models of care.
"This literature review provides still more evidence that physician anesthesiologist-led anesthesia care teams are associated with better patient outcomes, fewer complications, less pain, earlier return to functionality and home, and lower costs," said J.P. Abenstein, ASA president. "The Perioperative Surgical Home will advance our goals of improved patient safety, quality of care and cost-effectiveness. Every patient undergoing an invasive procedure deserves the involvement of a physician anesthesiologist in their care."
Researchers from Texas A&M University and the ASA performed a comprehensive analysis of 152 peer-reviewed studies published between 1980 and 2013. They compared PSH models in the U.S. and other countries and summarized the findings related to clinical outcomes and efficiencies/cost of surgery in various surgical homes. All studies were categorized as preoperative, intraoperative or postoperative in scope.
According to the review, 82 percent of preoperative studies analyzed found that the PSH model had a significant positive impact on preoperative clinical outcomes (32 studies) and reduced costs (23 studies). Studies cited preoperative patient education as a component of the PSH model that significantly reduced length of stays and readmission rates. Additionally, studies cited that minimizing the number of unnecessary preoperative tests was found to reduce costs. In fact, one study found eliminating unneeded tests reduced costs by as much $112 per patient, for a total of $1.01 million over the course of the study.
Eighty-two percent of intraoperative studies analyzed found that the PSH model had a significant positive impact on intraoperative clinical outcomes (29 studies) and reduced costs (17 studies). Studies cited design and process flow initiatives such as real-time patient-routing systems (real-time electronic dashboards that ensure access to medical records) as one of the intraoperative components of the PSH model that led to a reduction in O.R. delays, surgical cancellations and improved efficiencies.
Last, 90 percent of postoperative studies analyzed found that the PSH model had a significant positive impact on clinical outcomes (71 studies) and reduced costs (23 studies). Studies cited enhanced recovery after surgery programs as a component of the PSH model that significantly helped reduce complications, length of stays and costs by encouraging quicker recovery and earlier discharges.
"We would like to see the PSH model of care be adopted nationwide," said Miller. "Large reviews such as this show just how successful this model of care can be at raising the quality of care for patients, while meeting the increasing demands of health care reform."
INFORMATION:
THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANESTHESIOLOGISTS
Founded in 1905, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) is an educational, research and scientific society with more than 52,000 members organized to raise and maintain the standards of the medical practice of anesthesiology. ASA is committed to ensuring that physician anesthesiologists evaluate and supervise the medical care of patients before, during, and after surgery to provide the highest quality and safest care that every patient deserves.
For more information on the field of anesthesiology, visit the American Society of Anesthesiologists online at asahq.org. To learn more about the role physician anesthesiologists play in ensuring patient safety, visit asahq.org/WhenSecondsCount.
Oil reservoirs are scattered deep inside the Earth like far-flung islands in the ocean, so their inhabitants might be expected to be very different, but a new study led by Dartmouth College and University of Oslo researchers shows these underground microbes are social creatures that have exchanged genes for eons.
The study, which was led by researchers at Dartmouth College and the University of Oslo, appears in the ISME Journal. A PDF is available on request.
The findings shed new light on the "deep biosphere," or the vast subterranean realm whose single-celled residents ...
BOZEMAN, Mont. - Cathy Cripps doesn't seem to worry about the grizzly bears and black bears that watch her work, but she is concerned about the ghosts and skeletons she encounters.
The ghosts are whitebark pine forests that have been devastated by mountain pine beetles and white pine blister rust, said the Montana State University scientist who studies fungi that grow in extreme environments. The skeletons are dead trees that no longer shade snow or produce pine cones. The round purple pine cones hold the seeds that feed bears, red squirrels and Clark's nutcracker birds. ...
Amsterdam, NL, December 12, 2014 - A patient who had suffered a traumatic brain injury unexpectedly recovered full consciousness after the administration of midazolam, a mild depressant drug of the GABA A agonists family. This resulted in the first recorded case of an "awakening" from a minimally-conscious state (MCS) using this therapy. Although similar awakenings have been reported using other drugs, this dramatic result was unanticipated. It is reported in Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience.
Traumatic brain injuries occur at high rates all over the world, estimated ...
New Rochelle, NY, December 11, 2014--In cases of traumatic brain injury (TBI), predicting the likelihood of a cranial lesion and determining the need for head computed tomography (CT) can be aided by measuring markers of bone injury in the blood. The results of a new study comparing the usefulness of two biomarkers released into the blood following a TBI are presented in Journal of Neurotrauma, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the Journal of Neurotrauma website at http://online.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/neu.2013.3245 ...
Training older people in the use of social media improves cognitive capacity, increases a sense of self-competence and could have a beneficial overall impact on mental health and well-being, according to a landmark study carried out in the UK.
A two-year project funded by the European Union and led by the University of Exeter in partnership with Somerset Care Ltd and Torbay & Southern Devon Health and Care NHS Trust gave a group of vulnerable older adults a specially-designed computer, broadband connection and training in how to use them.
Those who received training ...
WOODS HOLE, Mass.--Since the first "catalog" of the normal bacterial makeup of the human body was published in 2012, numerous connections between illness and disturbances in the human microbiota have been found. This week, scientists report yet another: Cancerous tumors in the ascending colon (the part nearest to the small intestine) are characterized by biofilms, which are dense clumps of bacterial cells encased in a self-produced matrix.
"This is the first time that biofilms have been shown to be associated with colon cancer, to our knowledge," says co-author Jessica ...
PITTSBURGH--An interest in the gender gap between the representations of female candidates in U.S. elections compared to their male counterparts led two University of Pittsburgh professors to take the issue into the laboratory for three years of research.
Associate Professors of Political Science Kristin Kanthak and Jonathan Woon have published an article about the first phase of their research findings. "Women Don't Run? Election Aversion and Candidate Entry" was published online Dec. 2 in the American Journal of Political Science.
"Past research has shown that women ...
A group of researchers from Recep Tayyip Erdoğan University, Faculty of Fisheries in Turkey discovered a new trout species. The newly described species Salmo kottelati, belongs to the Salmonidae family, which includes salmons, trouts, chars, graylings and freshwater whitefishes.
Salmonids include over 200 species, which have a high economic value because of their taste and famed sporting qualities.
The genus Salmo is widely distributed in rivers and streams of basins of the Marmara, Black, Aegean and Mediterranean seas. The genus is represented by 12 species in ...
In a contribution to an extraordinary international scientific collaboration the University of Sydney found that genomic 'fossils' of past viral infections are up to thirteen times less common in birds than mammals.
"We found that only found only five viral families have left a footprint in the bird genome (genetic material) during evolution. Our study therefore suggests that birds are either less susceptible to viral invasions or purge them more effectively than mammals," said Professor Edward Holmes, from the University of Sydney's Charles Perkins Centre, School of ...
A new study analyses the violent behaviours exhibited towards pregnant women. While 21% of women suffer emotional violence during pregnancy, 3.6% encounter physical or sexual violence. Furthermore, 36.1% of those who reported physical violence claimed that it happened "very often" or "daily".
Whilst for many women pregnancy is a happy time, for almost one in four it turns out not to be so enjoyable. An investigation into the prevalence of domestic violence against pregnant women has found that 22.7% endure some kind of violence - emotional, physical or sexual - within ...