Improving Quality Metrics with a Day-only Skin Abscess Protocol: Experience from Australia

World Journal of Surgery(2023)

Cited 0|Views5
No score
Abstract
Skin abscesses are a common emergency presentation often requiring incision and drainage; however, issues with theatre access lead to delays in management and high costs. The long-term impact in a tertiary centre of a standardised day-only protocol is unknown. The aim was to evaluate the impact of day-only skin abscess protocol (DOSAP) for emergency surgery of skin abscesses in a tertiary institution in Australia and to provide a blueprint for other institutions. A retrospective cohort study analysed several time periods: Period A (July 2014 to 2015, n = 201) pre-DOSAP implementation, Period B (July 2016 to 2017, n = 259) post-DOSAP, and Period C (July 2018 to 2022, n = 1,625) prospectively analysed four 12-month periods to assess long-term utilisation of DOSAP. Primary outcomes were length of stay and delay to theatre. Secondary outcome measures included theatre start time, representation rates and total costs. Statistical analysis using nonparametric methods was used to analyse the data. There was a significant decrease in ward length of stay (1.25 days vs. 0.65 days, P < 0.0001), delay to theatre (0.81 days vs. 0.44 days, P < 0.0001) and theatre start time before 10AM (44 cases vs. 96 cases, P < 0.0001) after implementation of DOSAP. There was a significant decrease in median cost of admission of 711.74 after accounting for inflation. Period C reported 1,006 abscess presentations successfully managed by DOSAP over the four-year period. Our study demonstrates the successful implementation of DOSAP in an Australian tertiary centre. The ongoing utilisation of the protocol demonstrates the ease of applicability.
More
Translated text
Key words
skin abscess protocol,day-only
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined