• Ann R Coll Surg Engl · May 2004

    Balancing priorities in the management of hip fractures: guidelines versus resources.

    • E Guryel, D J Redfern, and D M Ricketts.
    • Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Princess Royal Hospital, Haywards Heath, West Sussex, UK.
    • Ann R Coll Surg Engl. 2004 May 1;86(3):171-3.

    BackgroundAbout 60,000 patients are treated for hip fractures each year in the UK and the incidence is increasing. The majority of these patients are elderly and sick, and delay to operation may be fatal. The National Confidential Enquiry into Peri-Operative Deaths (NCEPOD) guidelines aim to improve quality of care for such patients. However, we present an audit highlighting the importance of balancing the implementation of such guidelines with available local resources to ensure that established priorities in the care of these patients remain paramount.MethodsThe 2001 NCEPOD report recommends that pre-operative transthoracic echocardiography be performed in patients who have evidence of aortic stenosis in order to identify those requiring invasive monitoring and high dependency unit care postoperatively.ResultsWe have assessed the impact of the implementation of these guidelines on surgery for fractured neck of femur at our hospital, auditing both delay to surgery and the effect of the investigation on subsequent management. In the period studied prior to the introduction of the NCEPOD guidelines, no patients underwent pre-operative echocardiography. Subsequent to their introduction, 10% of patients underwent the investigation, which in the current study did not alter management but did delay surgery by 4-8 days in all cases.ConclusionsFor such guidelines to be implemented, adequate resources should first be provided. In the absence of these resources, clinicians must balance the need for adequate pre-operative assessment with the need for urgent surgery.

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