Some complex surgical procedures allow for day surgery benefited from the advancement of the concept of enhanced recovery after surgery and minimally invasive surgical techniques. Shanghai Chest Hospital has set up thoracic day surgery ward incorporating some lung tumor surgeries into day surgery. Through process innovation, model innovation and management innovation, relying on the full-process closed-loop day surgery management system, the day surgery ward runs efficiently. It can help effectively alleviate the difficulty of admission and operation, and improve hospital operation efficiency as well as reduce the economic burden of disease. At the same time, we hope to explore an innovative development path for the possibility of day surgery in complex thoracic surgery, and create a new mode of day surgery that can be replicated and promoted.
Objective To establish a set of structure-process-outcome (SPO) indicators associating with the enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) process in day surgeries, based on the current data from Shanghai municipal hospitals. Methods The data on the first page of medical records of patients undergoing short-course surgery in 36 municipal hospitals in Shanghai between 2019 and 2021 were selected. The development of day surgery was analyzed, and the appropriate diseases and surgical catalogue for standardized management of day surgery were determined. Based on ERAS, the three-dimensional integrated indicators combined SPO process were designed. Results According to the national recommended day surgery directory, there were 87 kinds of day surgeries caried out by Shanghai municipal hospitals during 2019-2021. Another 81 kinds of day surgeries recommend had less than 100 cases. Under the circumstances, a set of SPO indicators were established, including 34 process indicators and 20 outcome indicators. They covered all process of day surgery. Conclusions An increase of day surgery is observed from 2019 to 2021 among Shanghai municipal hospitals. But the surgical ability still needs improving. The application of SPO indicators would provide evidence to enhance evaluation on how multi-disciplinary treatment and ERAS are conducted among day surgeries, therefore estimating if the surgical process is standard and methodical.
American Heart Association updated the guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and emergency cardiovascular care in November 2019. This focused update incorporates the systematic review conducted by the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation, an expert group consisting of hundreds of international resuscitation scientists, to identify the new evidence supporting the basic and advanced life support and first aid in emergency medical care. This focused update involves the life chain of CPR (dispatcher-assisted CPR and cardiac arrest centers), advanced cardiovascular life support (advanced airways, vasopressors, and extracorporeal CPR), and first aid for presyncope. This present review aims to interpret these updates by reviewing the literature and comparing the recommendations in this update with previous guidelines.
American Heart Association issued American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care in October 2020. A sixth link, recovery, has been added to both the adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest chain and in-hospital cardiac arrest chain in this version of the guidelines to emphasize the importance of recovery and survivorship for resuscitation outcomes. Analogous chains of survival have also been developed for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and in-hospital cardiac arrest. The major new and updated recommendations involve the early initiation of cardiopulmonary resuscitation by lay rescuers, early administration of epinephrine, real-time audiovisual feedback, physiologic monitoring of cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality, double sequential defibrillation not supported, intravenous access preferred over intraosseous, post-cardiac arrest care and neuroprognostication, care and support during recovery, debriefings for rescuers, and cardiac arrest in pregnancy. This present review aims to interpret these updates by reviewing the literature and comparing the recommendations in these guidelines with previous ones.