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Ambulatory Pathway for the Management of Superficial Abscesses: Criteria for Safe Provision of Care

Background Superficial abscesses are common surgical emergencies and unless complicated, are considered a low-priority emergency often leading to delayed primary treatment. Patients who are clinically stable benefit more from an ambulatory-care approach to their treatment. Aim of study This is a ret...

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Autores principales: Olugbemi, Mojolaoluwa, Ahmed, Ayesha, Prihartadi, Aliya, Ridgway, Lucy, Athisayaraj, Thomas, Sebastian, Boby
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9592799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36312632
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.29545
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author Olugbemi, Mojolaoluwa
Ahmed, Ayesha
Prihartadi, Aliya
Ridgway, Lucy
Athisayaraj, Thomas
Sebastian, Boby
author_facet Olugbemi, Mojolaoluwa
Ahmed, Ayesha
Prihartadi, Aliya
Ridgway, Lucy
Athisayaraj, Thomas
Sebastian, Boby
author_sort Olugbemi, Mojolaoluwa
collection PubMed
description Background Superficial abscesses are common surgical emergencies and unless complicated, are considered a low-priority emergency often leading to delayed primary treatment. Patients who are clinically stable benefit more from an ambulatory-care approach to their treatment. Aim of study This is a retrospective study to investigate the current practice of treatment of superficial abscesses at West Suffolk Hospital, United Kingdom, and evaluate the potential impact of implementing care via the ambulatory pathway to improve patients' experience, optimise the use of hospital resources and identify areas for service improvement. Patients and methods A total of 76 patients who required inpatient care for drainage of their superficial abscess under general anaesthesia over six months were a part of the study. Admission, procedure, and hospital stay characteristics were evaluated as well as our proposed superficial abscess ambulatory-care pathway (SAAP) criteria. Results The mean age was 39 ± 18 years. Perianal and pilonidal abscesses accounted for 53% of the procedures. Only 24% of the patients had a C-reactive protein (CRP) >100 at admission. The average waiting time before intervention was 19 hours (± 16.25) with patients spending two days on average in the hospital for a procedure that lasted an average of 31 minutes. Overall, 39.5% of the patients received drainage of their abscess on the same day of presentation to the hospital with only five discharges on the same day of admission. Of the total patients, 52.6% met our SAAP criteria for ambulatory care and could have avoided inpatient care and benefitted from same-day discharges. Conclusion Ambulatory care of a superficial abscess is a safe, feasible approach. We recommend establishing an ambulatory care pathway for the management of superficial abscess cases with our SAAP criteria serving as a useful objective guide for effective and safe triage of patients with reduced hospital stay and more efficient utilisation of resources.
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spelling pubmed-95927992022-10-28 Ambulatory Pathway for the Management of Superficial Abscesses: Criteria for Safe Provision of Care Olugbemi, Mojolaoluwa Ahmed, Ayesha Prihartadi, Aliya Ridgway, Lucy Athisayaraj, Thomas Sebastian, Boby Cureus General Surgery Background Superficial abscesses are common surgical emergencies and unless complicated, are considered a low-priority emergency often leading to delayed primary treatment. Patients who are clinically stable benefit more from an ambulatory-care approach to their treatment. Aim of study This is a retrospective study to investigate the current practice of treatment of superficial abscesses at West Suffolk Hospital, United Kingdom, and evaluate the potential impact of implementing care via the ambulatory pathway to improve patients' experience, optimise the use of hospital resources and identify areas for service improvement. Patients and methods A total of 76 patients who required inpatient care for drainage of their superficial abscess under general anaesthesia over six months were a part of the study. Admission, procedure, and hospital stay characteristics were evaluated as well as our proposed superficial abscess ambulatory-care pathway (SAAP) criteria. Results The mean age was 39 ± 18 years. Perianal and pilonidal abscesses accounted for 53% of the procedures. Only 24% of the patients had a C-reactive protein (CRP) >100 at admission. The average waiting time before intervention was 19 hours (± 16.25) with patients spending two days on average in the hospital for a procedure that lasted an average of 31 minutes. Overall, 39.5% of the patients received drainage of their abscess on the same day of presentation to the hospital with only five discharges on the same day of admission. Of the total patients, 52.6% met our SAAP criteria for ambulatory care and could have avoided inpatient care and benefitted from same-day discharges. Conclusion Ambulatory care of a superficial abscess is a safe, feasible approach. We recommend establishing an ambulatory care pathway for the management of superficial abscess cases with our SAAP criteria serving as a useful objective guide for effective and safe triage of patients with reduced hospital stay and more efficient utilisation of resources. Cureus 2022-09-24 /pmc/articles/PMC9592799/ /pubmed/36312632 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.29545 Text en Copyright © 2022, Olugbemi et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle General Surgery
Olugbemi, Mojolaoluwa
Ahmed, Ayesha
Prihartadi, Aliya
Ridgway, Lucy
Athisayaraj, Thomas
Sebastian, Boby
Ambulatory Pathway for the Management of Superficial Abscesses: Criteria for Safe Provision of Care
title Ambulatory Pathway for the Management of Superficial Abscesses: Criteria for Safe Provision of Care
title_full Ambulatory Pathway for the Management of Superficial Abscesses: Criteria for Safe Provision of Care
title_fullStr Ambulatory Pathway for the Management of Superficial Abscesses: Criteria for Safe Provision of Care
title_full_unstemmed Ambulatory Pathway for the Management of Superficial Abscesses: Criteria for Safe Provision of Care
title_short Ambulatory Pathway for the Management of Superficial Abscesses: Criteria for Safe Provision of Care
title_sort ambulatory pathway for the management of superficial abscesses: criteria for safe provision of care
topic General Surgery
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9592799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36312632
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.29545
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