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Readmission Within the First Day of Discharge Is Painful: Experience From an Australian General Surgical Service

Background Unplanned readmission to the hospital after discharge is a costly issue for healthcare systems and patients. It is a delicate balance between the resolution of the surgical problem and the length of hospital stay. Most studies have focused on readmissions within 28 or 30 days after discha...

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Autores principales: Chidambaram, Rama, Apikotoa, Sharie, Hicks, Rhiannon, Theophilus, Mary, Wijesuriya, Ruwan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9728989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36505950
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.32209
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author Chidambaram, Rama
Apikotoa, Sharie
Hicks, Rhiannon
Theophilus, Mary
Wijesuriya, Ruwan
author_facet Chidambaram, Rama
Apikotoa, Sharie
Hicks, Rhiannon
Theophilus, Mary
Wijesuriya, Ruwan
author_sort Chidambaram, Rama
collection PubMed
description Background Unplanned readmission to the hospital after discharge is a costly issue for healthcare systems and patients. It is a delicate balance between the resolution of the surgical problem and the length of hospital stay. Most studies have focused on readmissions within 28 or 30 days after discharge, despite data showing that many occur early in this period. This study examined the reasons for unplanned readmission within the first day after discharge.  Methods A retrospective cohort analysis of readmissions between 1st May 2016 and 1st May 2021 was undertaken by chart review. Readmissions on the “day of” and the “day after” discharge and their respective index admissions were identified via the hospital’s patient administration database, webPAS (DXC Technology, USA). Results There were 126 readmissions (0.5%) across 25,119 admissions. Common reasons for readmission were pain (28%, n=35), readmission for the same diagnosis (21%, n=26), surgical site infection (SSI) (11%, n=14), bleeding (11%, n=14) and ileus (6%, n=7). Analysis of index admissions showed that 18/35 readmissions for pain had inadequate pain management based on pain scores, analgesic use and discharge medications and 7/14 readmissions for SSI did not have appropriate treatment of a recognised SSI or did not have antibiotic prophylaxis guidelines adhered to. Fourteen of 26 readmissions for the same diagnosis received just continuation of treatment initiated at index admission.  Conclusion Pain is the most common reason for readmission within the first day after discharge in surgical patients. Better pain management, following antibiotic prophylaxis guidelines, and involving patients in discharge planning could prevent many readmissions.
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spelling pubmed-97289892022-12-08 Readmission Within the First Day of Discharge Is Painful: Experience From an Australian General Surgical Service Chidambaram, Rama Apikotoa, Sharie Hicks, Rhiannon Theophilus, Mary Wijesuriya, Ruwan Cureus Pain Management Background Unplanned readmission to the hospital after discharge is a costly issue for healthcare systems and patients. It is a delicate balance between the resolution of the surgical problem and the length of hospital stay. Most studies have focused on readmissions within 28 or 30 days after discharge, despite data showing that many occur early in this period. This study examined the reasons for unplanned readmission within the first day after discharge.  Methods A retrospective cohort analysis of readmissions between 1st May 2016 and 1st May 2021 was undertaken by chart review. Readmissions on the “day of” and the “day after” discharge and their respective index admissions were identified via the hospital’s patient administration database, webPAS (DXC Technology, USA). Results There were 126 readmissions (0.5%) across 25,119 admissions. Common reasons for readmission were pain (28%, n=35), readmission for the same diagnosis (21%, n=26), surgical site infection (SSI) (11%, n=14), bleeding (11%, n=14) and ileus (6%, n=7). Analysis of index admissions showed that 18/35 readmissions for pain had inadequate pain management based on pain scores, analgesic use and discharge medications and 7/14 readmissions for SSI did not have appropriate treatment of a recognised SSI or did not have antibiotic prophylaxis guidelines adhered to. Fourteen of 26 readmissions for the same diagnosis received just continuation of treatment initiated at index admission.  Conclusion Pain is the most common reason for readmission within the first day after discharge in surgical patients. Better pain management, following antibiotic prophylaxis guidelines, and involving patients in discharge planning could prevent many readmissions. Cureus 2022-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9728989/ /pubmed/36505950 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.32209 Text en Copyright © 2022, Chidambaram 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 Pain Management
Chidambaram, Rama
Apikotoa, Sharie
Hicks, Rhiannon
Theophilus, Mary
Wijesuriya, Ruwan
Readmission Within the First Day of Discharge Is Painful: Experience From an Australian General Surgical Service
title Readmission Within the First Day of Discharge Is Painful: Experience From an Australian General Surgical Service
title_full Readmission Within the First Day of Discharge Is Painful: Experience From an Australian General Surgical Service
title_fullStr Readmission Within the First Day of Discharge Is Painful: Experience From an Australian General Surgical Service
title_full_unstemmed Readmission Within the First Day of Discharge Is Painful: Experience From an Australian General Surgical Service
title_short Readmission Within the First Day of Discharge Is Painful: Experience From an Australian General Surgical Service
title_sort readmission within the first day of discharge is painful: experience from an australian general surgical service
topic Pain Management
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9728989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36505950
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.32209
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