The Concept of Surgical Assessment: Part 1 – Introduction

2010 ◽  
Vol 92 (9) ◽  
pp. 322-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Okoro ◽  
C Sirianni ◽  
D Brigden

Assessing competency in surgery is an age-old tradition. In the infancy of surgical practice the issue of competency in surgical skills was addressed by the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, one of the oldest surgical organisations. Competency in surgical skills has taken on an added urgency in contemporary practice because of several high-profile public enquiries into underperforming surgeons, such as the Bristol children's heart surgery affair in the UK, the paediatric cardiac surgery programme at Winnipeg Children's Hospital, Canada, and the Bundaberg Hospital affair in Australia.

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Aditi Sinha ◽  
Alexander Geragotellis ◽  
Guntaj Kaur Singh ◽  
Devika Verma ◽  
Daniyal Matin Ansari ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Vocal cord palsy is one of the recognised complications of complex cardiac surgery in the paediatric population. While there is an abundance of literature highlighting the presence of this complication, there is a scarcity of research focusing on the pathophysiology, presentation, diagnosis, and treatment options available for children affected by vocal cord palsy. Materials and methods: Electronic searches were conducted using the search terms: “Vocal Cord Palsy,” “VCP,” “Vocal Cord Injury,” “Paediatric Heart Surgery,” “Congenital Heart Surgery,” “Pediatric Heart Surgery,” “Vocal Fold Movement Impairment,” “VFMI,” “Vocal Fold Palsy,” “PDA Ligation.” The inclusion criteria were any articles discussing the outcomes of vocal cord palsy following paediatric cardiac surgery. Results: The two main populations affected by vocal cord palsy are children undergoing aortic arch surgery or those undergoing PDA ligation. There is paucity of prospective follow-up studies; it is therefore difficult to reliably assess the current approaches and the long-term implications of management options. Conclusion: Vocal cord palsy can be a devastating complication following cardiac surgery, which if left untreated, could potentially result in debilitation of quality of life and in severe circumstances could even lead to death. Currently, there is not enough high-quality evidence in the literature to aid recognition, diagnosis, and management leaving clinicians to extrapolate evidence from adult studies to make clinical judgements. Future research with a focus on the paediatric perspective is necessary in providing evidence for good standards of care.


2009 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 370-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kerstin Bosse ◽  
Thomas Krasemann

AbstractIn many paediatric cardiosurgical units, a chest X-ray is routinely performed before discharge. We sought to evaluate the clinical impact of such routine radiographs in the management of children after cardiac surgery.Of 100 consecutive children, a chest X-ray was performed in 71 prior to discharge. Of these, 38 were clinically indicated, while 33 were performed as a routine. Therapeutic changes were instituted on the basis of the X-ray in 4 patients, in all of whom the imaging had been clinically indicated. No therapeutic changes followed those radiographs performed on a routine basis.Conclusion: Routine chest radiographs can be omitted prior to discharging patients after paediatric heart surgery.


2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (11) ◽  
pp. 1068-1074 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma Hudson ◽  
Katherine Brown ◽  
Christina Pagel ◽  
Jo Wray ◽  
David Barron ◽  
...  

ObjectiveEarly mortality rates for paediatric cardiac surgery have fallen due to advancements in care. Alternative indicators of care quality are needed. Postoperative morbidities are of particular interest. However, while health impacts have been reported, associated costs are unknown. Our objective was to calculate the costs of postoperative morbidities following paediatric cardiac surgery.DesignTwo methods of data collection were integrated into the main study: (1) case-matched cohort study of children with and without predetermined morbidities; (2) incidence rates of morbidity, measured prospectively.SettingFive specialist paediatric cardiac surgery centres, accounting for half of UK patients.PatientsCohort study included 666 children (340 with morbidities). Incidence rates were measured in 3090 consecutive procedures.MethodsRisk-adjusted regression modelling to determine marginal effects of morbidities on per-patient costs. Calculation of costs for hospital providers according to incidence rates. Extrapolation using mandatory audit data to report annual financial burden for the health service.Outcome measuresImpact of postoperative morbidities on per-patient costs, hospital costs and UK health service costs.ResultsSeven of the 10 morbidity categories resulted in significant costs, with mean (95% CI) additional costs ranging from £7483 (£3–£17 289) to £66 784 (£40 609–£103 539) per patient. On average all morbidities combined increased hospital costs by 22.3%. Total burden to the UK health service exceeded £21 million each year.ConclusionPostoperative morbidities are associated with a significant financial burden. Our findings could aid clinical teams and hospital providers to account for costs and contextualise quality improvement initiatives.


Open Heart ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. e000157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine L Brown ◽  
Sonya Crowe ◽  
Rodney Franklin ◽  
Andrew McLean ◽  
David Cunningham ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Pagel ◽  
KL Brown ◽  
S Crowe ◽  
M Utley ◽  
D Cunningham ◽  
...  

BackgroundCongenital heart disease (CHD) is a relatively common disorder in childhood, affecting approximately 8–9 per 1000 live-born infants annually in the UK. CHD often involves serious abnormalities and is an important cause of childhood mortality, morbidity and disability. It is generally recognised that it is important and valuable to monitor outcomes in cardiac surgery and that, to do so fairly and effectively, one needs to risk stratify the case load of each unit. There is evidence that, since outcome monitoring in adult cardiac surgery became mandatory and routine, outcomes have improved. At present, no process for routinely monitoring risk-adjusted outcomes in paediatric cardiac surgery exists.ObjectivesTo establish whether or not a risk model can be developed that is fit for the purpose of adjusting for case mix severity to facilitate routine monitoring of outcomes for paediatric cardiac surgery in the UK and to assess whether or not and how diagnostic information can augment procedural information in risk adjustment.MethodsData from the Central Cardiac Audit Database (CCAD) for all cardiac surgery procedures, excluding reoperations within 30 days, performed in the UK for patients < 16 years between 2000 and 2010 (38,597 patient episodes) were included: 70% for model development and 30% quarantined for validation. The outcome was 30-day survival, as supplied to CCAD through the Central Register of NHS patients (now the Medical Research Information Service). The CCAD defines 36 ‘specific procedures’. Nine of these were merged as a ‘low-volume specific procedure’ group (< 90 cases each in the entire development set). Unassigned cases were grouped as ‘not a specific procedure’. Twenty-four ‘primary’ cardiac diagnoses and separately a categorisation of ‘univentricular’ status were defined using a hierarchical algorithm developed by the study team based on International Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac codes. Comorbidities considered included prematurity (< 37 weeks' gestation), Down syndrome, constellations of features that constitute a recognised syndrome, congenital structural defects of organs other than the heart and acquired conditions. Other candidate variables included use of bypass and patient age, weight and sex. Data were analysed using logistic regression.ResultsIn the development set, there were 25,665 episodes that resulted in survival to 30 days, 693 episodes for which the vital status at 30 days was unknown and 854 episodes that resulted in death within 30 days in the development set (mortality 3.2% overall). The risk model developed includes the following factors: specific procedure, primary cardiac diagnosis grouped into low-, medium- and high-risk categories, univentricular heart status, age band (neonate, infant, child), continuous age, continuous weight, presence of a comorbidity other than Down syndrome and use of bypass. To account for decreasing mortality over time in the development set, a binary indicator for operations performed after 1 January 2007 is also included in the model. We were able to calculate a risk score for 95% of cases in the test set: weight was missing in 5% of cases. Data completeness improved over time. The proposed model discriminated well: the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) for the test set was 0.77 (0.81 for post-2007 data). Removal of all but procedural information gave a reduced AUC of 0.72. The model performed well across the spectrum of predicted risk in the entire data set, but there was underestimation of mortality risk in the test set among neonates operated from 2007.LimitationsAn important limitation is that the model pertains to short-term 30-day outcomes (not long-term outcomes) and is designed for the purpose of routine monitoring for quality assurance rather than bedside-type predictions for individual patients. Over the recent period in the validation set (since 2007), the model was found to underestimate risk at the very high-risk end (> 10% risk), in particular among neonates. This indicates that risk adjustment based on the current parameterisation of the model will potentially give an unduly negative impression of outcomes at those centres with a high proportion of high-risk cases. Finally, any risk model used for ongoing quality improvement initiatives needs to be regularly updated as data quality improves and clinical practice evolves.ConclusionsFor the first time diagnostic information has been successfully incorporated into risk adjustment for short-term outcomes in this patient group, which added discriminatory power. The risk model is fit for purpose, although the underestimation of risk in recent neonates is an important caveat. Several centres have expressed an interest in piloting the risk model and the accompanying monitoring tool. Future work includes developing software to generate variable life-adjusted display charts within units using the risk model; using the risk model to explore trends in case mix over time; and informing future work in evaluating long-term outcomes for children with CHD.FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. e000578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veena Rajagopal ◽  
Katherine Brown ◽  
Christina Pagel ◽  
Jo Wray

BackgroundFollowing paediatric cardiac surgery, quality of life may be significantly impacted by morbidities associated with cardiac surgery. Parental understanding of the potential for postoperative morbidity is important for informed decision making. As part of a broader research study, we aimed to elicit parental understanding and experience of the communication of morbidities following their child’s cardiac surgery, using traditional focus groups together with an online forum.MethodsThe Children’s Heart Federation set up and moderated a closed, anonymous online discussion group via their Facebook page, focusing on complications, information needs and methods of providing families with information. Additionally, we ran three focus groups with parents/carers, moderated by an experienced independent professional. Focus groups were recorded and transcribed and a single transcript was generated from the online forum. All transcripts were thematically analysed.ResultsAll data were collected in 2014. The forum ran over 3 months in 2014 and involved 72 participants. Focus groups involved 13 participants. Three broad themes were identified: (1) clinicians’ use of language, (2) feeling unprepared for complications and (3) information needs of families.ConclusionsClinicians’ language is often misunderstood, with wide variability in the way morbidities are described, and between differing teams looking after the same child. Information may not be easily absorbed or retained by families, who often felt unprepared for morbidities that arose after their child’s heart surgery. Here, we propose key principles of good communication tailored to the individual receiving it.


2011 ◽  
Vol 59 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
R Sodian ◽  
S Haeberle ◽  
S Weber ◽  
T Lueth ◽  
A Beiras-Fernandez ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 103
Author(s):  
Mark M. Levinson

Heart Surgery Forum meeting: Challenges and Solutions in Modern Cardiac Surgery held in Split, Croatia.


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