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Enhanced Recovery (ERAS) . SUSP Surgeon call February 26, 2014. What is ERAS?. First proposed by Dr. Henrik Kehlet, British Anesthesiologist Multimodal approach to control postoperative pathophysiology and rehabilitation. Br. J. Anaesth . 1997;78:606-617.
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Enhanced Recovery (ERAS) SUSP Surgeon call February 26, 2014
What is ERAS? • First proposed by Dr. Henrik Kehlet, British Anesthesiologist • Multimodal approach to control postoperative pathophysiology and rehabilitation. Br. J. Anaesth. 1997;78:606-617. • “The hypothesis that a combination of unimodal evidence based care interventions to enhance recovery will subsequently decrease need for hospitalization, convalescence and morbidity.” Kehlet H. LangenbecksArchSurg (2011) 396:585–559 • Supportedby large bodyofevidence in virtuallyeveryfieldfromvasculartobariatricsto Whipple tocolorectal
Supporting DATA • Dis Colon Rectum 2013 – Meta-analysis of 13 studies demonstrating significantly decreased LOS, complication rate, similar readmit and mortality • Typically all studies demonstrate a 50 – 60% reduction in LOS • Duke experience (abstract ASA 2011) • Before/after design demonstrated significant reduction in LOS, surgical site infection, urinary tract infection, hypotension requiring treatment • Mayo experience (Lovely J, et al. Br J Surg. 2011;99:120-126.) • Before/after design demonstrated 44% of patients discharged on POD 2, opiod requirements less without increased pain scores, complication rate similar, hospital costs were reduced by an average of $1,039/pt
Goal of ERAS Implement a standardized, patient centered protocol Integrate the pre-operative, intra-operative, post-operative and post-discharges phases of care to reduce LOS Improve patient experience and satisfaction and decrease variability
Basic Principles of ERAS • Enhanced Recovery is a multidisciplinary and collaborative approach focusing on: -Patient education and participation -Optimization of perioperative nutrition -Standardization of perioperative anesthetic plan to minimize narcotics, intravenous fluids and post operative nausea and vomiting -Stress relief -Early mobilization and oral intake
Main shifts in mentality • Pain management • Goal is to diminish narcotic intake • Fluid management • Goal is to avoid volume overload – bowel edema • Activity • Goal is to induce early mobility and get the bowels moving!
Develop Clinical Specifics and Standardization of care Clinic Prep Inpatient and ICU unit PACU (pain control and mobilization) Post-op pain control plan
ERAS Evaluation • Audit of processes (pain regimen, fluid in OR and post-op, education, mobility, diet etc.) • Length of Stay • Pain scores post-operative • HCAPS • 30 day Morbidity • Readmission • Monthly reports and feedback to optimize implementation
Our Model Reducing Surgical Site Infections Translating Evidence Into Practice (TRiP) Comprehensive Unit based Safety Program (CUSP) • Emerging Evidence • Local Opportunities to Improve • Collaborative learning • Summarize the evidence in a checklist • Identify local barriers to implementation • Measure performance • Ensure all patients get the evidence • Engage • Educate • Execute • Evaluate Educate staff on science of safety Identify defects Assign executive to adopt unit Learn from one defect per quarter Implement teamwork tools Technical Work Adaptive Work