Hunter J G, Lyon C, Galloway K, Putterill M, van Rij A
Department of Surgery, Emory University Hospital, 1364 Clifton Road, N.E., Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Surg Endosc. 1999 Jul;13(7):699-704. doi: 10.1007/s004649901076.
Clinically relevant surgical outcomes are usually monitored by surgeons only for new and/or high-volume procedures. Prospective outcomes audit studies are rarely done on 100% of procedures performed by a single surgeon, a surgical practice, or an institution. Therefore, we set out to determine the resource utilization and accuracy of a well-validated system at its introduction into a North American university surgical practice.
The Otago Surgical Audit, which has been validated in a wide spectrum of surgical practices in Australasia, was applied to a university practice in general and laparoscopic surgery. Data were recorded by the surgeon on the day of operation, at discharge, and during any subsequent readmission. Resource utilization was determined by timing the important steps in data acquisition and computer entry. Data accuracy was assessed by an independent chart review of 22% of all records. Case capture was audited by reviewing operating room case logs.
Over 1 year, from October 1, 1996 to September 30, 1997, 338 procedures were performed. Data recording and coding by the surgeon required 2 min per form, or a total of 676 min (11.3 h) annually. Data entry required 2.11 min per form, or a total of 713 min (11.9 h) for the year. Eight percent of cases were returned to the surgeon for additional information. In the medical record audit, no additional mortality or readmissions were discovered, and one minor complication was recorded in the hospital record but not the outcomes audit. One complication and three operations recorded in the audit database were omitted from operating room records. Two minor procedures on the operating room log were omitted from the audit database. Operating time reported by the surgeon averaged 19 min less than recorded in the operative log. Data accuracy and coding accuracy improved significantly between the 1st month (month 4) and the 2nd month audited (month 12), (p <.01).
It is possible to perform a 100% clinical outcome audit with the use of minimal resources. When the surgeon is involved with data acquisition and coding, the accuracy and completeness of the log may outstrip the medical record, but a learning curve of 4-6 months may be required to achieve this goal.
临床相关的手术结果通常仅由外科医生针对新开展的和/或高容量的手术进行监测。前瞻性结果审计研究很少针对单个外科医生、外科科室或机构所开展的100%的手术进行。因此,我们着手确定一个经过充分验证的系统引入北美一所大学外科科室时的资源利用情况和准确性。
已在澳大拉西亚地区广泛的外科实践中得到验证的奥塔哥外科审计应用于一所大学的普通外科和腹腔镜外科实践。数据由外科医生在手术当天、出院时以及随后的任何再入院期间进行记录。通过计算数据采集和计算机录入中的重要步骤所需时间来确定资源利用情况。通过对所有记录的22%进行独立的病历审查来评估数据准确性。通过审查手术室病例日志来审计病例捕获情况。
在1996年10月1日至1997年9月30日的1年期间,共进行了338例手术。外科医生进行数据记录和编码每份表格需要2分钟,每年总计676分钟(11.3小时)。数据录入每份表格需要2.11分钟,一年总计713分钟(11.9小时)。8%的病例被退回给外科医生以获取更多信息。在病历审计中,未发现额外的死亡病例或再入院情况,医院记录中记录了1例轻微并发症,但结果审计中未记录。审计数据库中记录的1例并发症和3例手术未记录在手术室记录中。手术室日志中的2例小手术未记录在审计数据库中。外科医生报告的手术时间平均比手术日志中记录的少19分钟。在审计的第1个月(第4个月)和第2个月(第12个月)之间,数据准确性和编码准确性有显著提高(p<.01)。
使用最少的资源进行100%的临床结果审计是可行的。当外科医生参与数据采集和编码时,日志的准确性和完整性可能超过病历,但可能需要4至6个月的学习曲线才能实现这一目标。