Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Sep 2022
Hospital-Acquired Infection, Length of Stay, and Readmission in Elective Surgery Patients Transfused 1 Unit of Red Blood Cells: A Retrospective Cohort Study.
Most patients transfused red blood cells in elective surgery receive small volumes of blood, which is likely to be discretionary and avoidable. We investigated the outcomes of patients who received a single unit of packed red blood cells during their hospital admission for an elective surgical procedure when compared to those not transfused. ⋯ These results suggest that avoidance of even small volumes of packed red blood cells may prevent adverse clinical outcomes. This may encourage hospital administrators to implement strategies to avoid the transfusion of even small volumes of red blood cells by applying patient blood management practices.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Sep 2022
Effect of a Rapid Response Team on the Incidence of In-Hospital Mortality.
Approximately half of the life-limiting events, such as cardiopulmonary arrests or cardiac arrhythmias occurring in hospitals, are considered preventable. These critical events are usually preceded by clinical deterioration. Rapid response teams (RRTs) were introduced to intervene early in the course of clinical deterioration and possibly prevent progression to an event. An RRT was introduced at the Cleveland Clinic in 2009 and transitioned to an anesthesiologist-led system in 2012. We evaluated the association between in-hospital mortality and: (1) the introduction of the RRT in 2009 (primary analysis), and (2) introduction of the anesthesiologist-led system in 2012 and other policy changes in 2014 (secondary analyses). ⋯ We found a gradual decrease in mortality over a 9-year period after introduction of an RRT program. Although mechanisms underlying this decrease are unclear, possibilities include optimization of RRT implementation, anesthesiology department leadership of the RRT program, and overall improvements in health care delivery over the study period. Our findings suggest that improvements in outcome after RRT introduction may take years to manifest. Further work is needed to better understand the effects of RRT implementation on in-hospital mortality.