Uffman Joshua C, Kim Stephani S, Quan Loan N, Shelton Thomas, Beltran Ralph J, Jatana Kris R, Chiang Tendy, Tobias Joseph D
Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Oh.
Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, Oh.
Pediatr Qual Saf. 2022 Jul 1;7(4):e574. doi: 10.1097/pq9.0000000000000574. eCollection 2022 Jul-Aug.
AAP guidelines recommend infants less than 6 months of age are monitored for at least 2 hours following surgery. This retrospective study evaluated if adherence to the 2-hour monitoring guideline decreased the risk of adverse events associated with ambulatory procedures in infants younger than 6 months.
We queried the hospital's electronic medical record to identify patients younger than 6 months of age who received anesthetic care from January 2015 to March 2020. Demographic data, intraoperative adverse events, and returns to the emergency department (ED) or urgent care within 7 days were captured for each patient. We calculated the number and frequency for categorical data and median and interquartile range (IQR) for continuous data. Chi-square or Fisher's exact test were used to compare patients who experienced an adverse event to those that did not.
One thousand one hundred seventy-seven patients who had 1,261 unique anesthetic encounters were analyzed. Forty-four adverse events were identified, 20 (1.6%) before discharge, including 3 unplanned admissions, and 24 (1.9%) returns to the ED/UC within 7 days postoperatively. We did not observe differences in postoperative recovery time in patients who experienced an adverse event and those who did not (88 min vs. 77 min, respectively, = 0.078). None of the ED/UC returns would have been avoided by a longer PACU stay.
With the appropriate patient selection, once physiological discharge readiness is met, adherence to a strict 2-hour time-based discharge criteria does not increase safety for infants younger than 6 months of age after ambulatory procedures.
美国儿科学会(AAP)指南建议,6个月以下婴儿术后至少监测2小时。这项回顾性研究评估了遵循2小时监测指南是否能降低6个月以下婴儿门诊手术相关不良事件的风险。
我们查询了医院的电子病历,以确定2015年1月至2020年3月期间接受麻醉护理的6个月以下患者。记录了每位患者的人口统计学数据、术中不良事件以及7天内返回急诊科(ED)或紧急护理的情况。我们计算了分类数据的数量和频率,以及连续数据的中位数和四分位数间距(IQR)。使用卡方检验或费舍尔精确检验比较发生不良事件的患者和未发生不良事件的患者。
分析了1177例患者的1261次独特麻醉经历。共确定了44例不良事件,其中20例(1.6%)在出院前发生,包括3例非计划住院,24例(1.9%)在术后7天内返回ED/UC。我们未观察到发生不良事件的患者和未发生不良事件的患者术后恢复时间存在差异(分别为88分钟和77分钟,P = 0.078)。延长麻醉后护理单元(PACU)停留时间并不能避免任何返回ED/UC的情况。
通过适当的患者选择,一旦达到生理上的出院准备标准,遵循严格的基于2小时的出院标准并不会增加6个月以下婴儿门诊手术后的安全性。