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Anesthesia and analgesia · Oct 2022
Outcomes and Disposition of Patients After Case Cancellation on Day of Surgery for Reasons Attributed to Medical or Anesthetic Care: A Retrospective Cohort Analysis.
- George L Tewfik, Carlos Rodriguez-Aponte, Kathy Zhang, Bishoy Ezzat, Pooja Suri, and Faraz Chaudhry.
- From the Department of Anesthesiology, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey.
- Anesth. Analg. 2022 Oct 1; 135 (4): 845-854.
BackgroundMany day-of-surgery cancellations are avoidable, and different strategies are used to prevent these costly adverse events. Despite these past analyses and evaluations of positive interventions, studies have not examined the final disposition of patients whose cases were canceled in this late manner. This study sought to determine whether surgical procedures canceled for medical or anesthetic reasons were ultimately rescheduled, and the time elapsed between cancellation and completion. In addition, the resolution of the underlying issue leading to cancellation was examined.MethodsTwo years of surgical case data were reviewed in the electronic health record to isolate all procedures canceled on the intended operative date. These cases were then filtered by the documented reason for cancellation into 2 categories: 1 for cases related to medical or anesthetic care and 1 for unrelated cases. Medical- or anesthetic-related cases were further categorized to better elucidate the underlying reason for cancellation. Cases were then traced to determine if and when the procedure was ultimately completed. If a case was rescheduled, the record was reviewed to determine whether the underlying reason for cancellation was resolved.ResultsA total of 4472 cases were canceled in the study period with only 20% associated with medical or anesthetic causes. Of these, 72% were rescheduled and 83% of all rescheduled cases resolved the underlying issue before the rescheduled procedure. Nearly half of all cases (47.8%) canceled on the day of surgery for reasons linked to medical and/or anesthetic care were due to acute conditions.ConclusionsNearly a fifth of cases that are canceled on the date of surgery are never rescheduled and, if they are rescheduled, the delay can be substantial. Although the majority of patients whose procedure are canceled for reasons related to medical or anesthetic care have resolved the underlying issue that led to initial postponement, a significant portion of patients have no change in their status before the ultimate completion of their surgical procedure.Copyright © 2022 International Anesthesia Research Society.
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