View clinical trials related to Ambulatory Surgical Procedures.
Filter by:The study was planned to be conducted as a randomized controlled experimental study to examine the effect of preoperative tele-nursing counseling on anxiety and patient satisfaction in same day surgery. The main Research Hypotheses are; Preoperative tele-nursing counseling has no effect on anxiety in same day surgery. Preoperative tele-nursing counseling has an effect on anxiety in same day surgery. Preoperative tele-nursing counseling has no effect on patient satisfaction in same day surgery. Preoperative tele-nursing counseling has an effect on patient satisfaction in same day surgery.
According to the 2013 guidelines of the French Society for Hospital Hygiene (SF2H), it is recommended to carry out at least one preoperative shower, with an antiseptic soap or a mild soap as close as possible to the operation. This preoperative shower aims to eliminate dirt and make the skin clean to facilitate the subsequent action of the antiseptic in the operating theatre. Thus, detersion is no longer carried out systematically but is only recommended in the presence of soiled skin. The preoperative shower, and the verification of its effectiveness, therefore become essential steps in the preoperative skin preparation. Indeed, the cleanliness of the skin influences the quality of the antisepsis performed in the operating theatre. Visual assessment of preoperative skin cleanliness by the nurse is currently the reference technique. However, a qualitative pilot study (Consiglio et al., Rech Soins Inf 2021) of nine obese patients and eleven surgical nurses revealed a lack of visual verification of skin cleanliness, which caregivers found difficult to perform. In a second multicentre study of 430 patients (Boulet et al., under review by Nursing Open), only 17% reported visual verification of skin cleanliness. Thus, this initial work highlights a barrier for caregivers to visually check preoperative skin cleanliness. The ATPmetry method was initially developed to assess the cleanliness of surfaces. In a second phase, the manufacturer (Hygiena®) showed through a study of 20 professionals that this method also allowed the evaluation of skin cleanliness of hands after washing. This method would have the advantage of being objective, potentially improving acceptability to caregivers and patients compared to direct visual inspection of skin cleanliness. Thus, ATPmetry appears to us as a method of interest for assessing preoperative skin cleanliness, but needs to be validated for this indication. To date, there is no other method than the simple subjective visual skin assessment by the caregiver, which is highly exposed to a bias of non-reproducibility and inter-observer variability.
This is a prospective study-registry on preoperative patient characteristics and postoperative complications in patients having fast-track hip and knee replacement surgery in 8 Danish dedicated arthroplasty departments from all five health regions in Denmark. The registry consists of detailed patient and physician reported preoperative characteristics and including prescribed medication and lab results. Follow-up is based on electronical medical records by dedicated nurses with physician backup and includes Clavien-Dindo and Comprehensive Complication Index scoring. All patients having day-surgery also completes a patient reported questionaire on health-care utilization and return to work by day 30. Finally, a machine-learning algorithm for identification of "high-risk" patients based on he preoperative data is included.
Rebound pain is a well-recognized phenomenon after the effects of a nerve block wear off. Severe rebound pain can happen after outpatient surgery, with patients often needing to come back to the hospital or use other health care resources. People who are younger, female or have more pain before surgery are at higher risk of having rebound pain. Bone surgeries and upper limb surgeries also increase the chances of having rebound pain after surgery. Patients who have a tourniquet used during leg surgery often have worse pain after surgery compared to patients who get surgery without the use of a tourniquet. Things that may reduce the chances of getting rebound pain are the use of nerve block catheters, certain additives in nerve blocks and using multiple types of pain killers before the block wears off. Using nerve block catheters can be expensive, so a targeted approach of giving these catheters to patients who have the highest chances of getting rebound pain may be the best way to allocate resources and help patients. The aim of this study is to create and test a risk model for severe rebound pain after lower limb surgery where patients are getting a sciatic nerve block.
In this prospective two-arm study, the investigators will evaluate the incidence of suboptimal preoperative assessments when the participants are evaluated through a web based application (Preanestes@s) versus the traditional outpatient interview.
The purpose of this study is to retrospectively analyze data from more than 3000 procedures, to better define the safety profile of spinal prilocaine and the incidence of complications and side effects.
Extended day surgery or 23 h surgery (23-hour surgery) is a surgical model where patients arrive to the hospital from home at the day of surgery, are operated and recover in a 23 h surgery unit. 23H surgery units are usually situated near postoperative recovery unit. THe 23 H surgical model was implemented in Kuopio University Hospital 2015 and between May 2017-May 2018 patients were recruited in the present prospective follow up cohort study. Patients were informed and they gave their informed consent. The patients were contacted two weeks after the study and details of their recovery were asked.
Preoperative anxiety is a common problem with an impact on surgical outcome, anaesthetic drug dosage and patient's satisfaction. An important component of preoperative anxiety is due to concerns related to anaesthesia. Appropriate patients information has been shown to reduce preoperative anxiety level and this can be effectively achieved through a video. The aim of this study is to assess the impact of an informative video about the anaesthesia technique on patient's preoperative anxiety levels before minor ambulatory procedures. The study design is a prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial, where we use of short patient educational video to reduce preoperative anxiety level, explaining all sequence of major events between the arrival in the operating room and the performance of anaesthesia.
In this single-centre, double-blinded, randomized controlled superiority trial, 189 participants having outpatient, arthroscopic shoulder surgery will be randomized into 3 equal sized groups. All participants will receive a standardized interscalene brachial plexus block and 4mg of dexamethasone or 50mcg of dexmedetomidine or both intravenously just prior to their surgery. The purpose of this study is to provide a head to head comparison of two types intravenous adjuncts to ISB, corticosteroids and alpha 2 agonists, and determine if their combination, or either one alone provides superior postoperative analgesia in arthroscopic shoulder surgery patients, as well as possibly show a synergistic relationship between the two adjuncts. The investigators hypothesize the combination of adjuncts will provide a longer duration of analgesia compared to either single agent.
Emergence agitation/delirium (EA/ED) is a common complication in pediatric surgery patients, which increases the risk of developing postoperative airway obstruction and respiratory depression. In infants, there is a high incidence of emergence agitation (EA) after desoflurane anesthesia. The aim of the present preliminary study was to determine the safety and efficacy of of intraoperative infusion of dexmedetomidine (DEX) that would prevent postoperative EA and ED in children undergoing day surgery with desoflurane anesthesia