Factors affecting recovery and discharge following ambulatory surgery

Recovery and discharge following ambulatory surgery are important components of the ambulatory surgery experience. This review provides contemporary perspectives on the issues of discharge criteria, fast-tracking, patient escort requirements, and driving after ambulatory anesthesia. A search was per...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of anesthesia 2006-09, Vol.53 (9), p.858-872
Hauptverfasser: AWAD, Imad T, CHUNG, Frances
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container_title Canadian journal of anesthesia
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creator AWAD, Imad T
CHUNG, Frances
description Recovery and discharge following ambulatory surgery are important components of the ambulatory surgery experience. This review provides contemporary perspectives on the issues of discharge criteria, fast-tracking, patient escort requirements, and driving after ambulatory anesthesia. A search was performed in the Cochrane Central Register for Controlled Trials, MEDLINE(R), EMBASE(R), CINAHL, and PsycINFO, to review factors delaying discharge following ambulatory surgery. The following subject headings were used: "ambulatory surgery, discharge, recovery, car driving, escort, transport, fast tracking, patient discharge, recovery, transportation of patients, hospital discharge, recovery room, patient transport, hospital discharge, recovery room, anesthetic recovery, patient transport, ambulatory surgical procedures, patient discharge, recovery of function, automobile driving, patient escort service, recovery room". Using the same search engines, the following keywords were used: "fast tracking, recovery, and discharge". The current literature supports that discharge scoring systems may be useful to guide discharge following ambulatory surgery. While fast-tracking has become common in some centres, further studies are required to justify more routine implementation of this practice in the management of patients undergoing ambulatory surgery. Patients at low risk for urinary retention can be discharged home without voiding. Patients should not drive until at least 24 hr postoperatively. Ensuring rapid postoperative recovery and safe discharge following ambulatory surgery are important components of the ambulatory surgical program. A clearly defined process should be established for each ambulatory surgical unit to ensure the safe and timely discharge of patients after anesthesia, in accordance with current best evidence.
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The current literature supports that discharge scoring systems may be useful to guide discharge following ambulatory surgery. While fast-tracking has become common in some centres, further studies are required to justify more routine implementation of this practice in the management of patients undergoing ambulatory surgery. Patients at low risk for urinary retention can be discharged home without voiding. Patients should not drive until at least 24 hr postoperatively. Ensuring rapid postoperative recovery and safe discharge following ambulatory surgery are important components of the ambulatory surgical program. 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source MEDLINE; SpringerLink Journals
subjects Ambulatory Surgical Procedures
Anesthesia
Anesthesia Recovery Period
Anesthesia. Intensive care medicine. Transfusions. Cell therapy and gene therapy
Automobile Driving
Biological and medical sciences
Hospitalization
Hospitals
Humans
Medical sciences
Patient Discharge
Postoperative Care
Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting - epidemiology
Psychomotor Performance
Surgery
Urination
title Factors affecting recovery and discharge following ambulatory surgery
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