Clinicians' perceptions of "enhanced recovery after surgery" (ERAS) protocols to improve patient safety in surgery: a national survey from Australia.

IF 2.6 Q1 SURGERY Patient Safety in Surgery Pub Date : 2024-05-23 DOI:10.1186/s13037-024-00397-w
Josephine Lovegrove, Georgia Tobiano, Wendy Chaboyer, Joan Carlini, Rhea Liang, Keith Addy, Brigid M Gillespie
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Abstract

Background: Surgical patients are at risk of postoperative complications, which may lead to increased morbidity, mortality, hospital length-of-stay and healthcare costs. Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS®) protocols are evidence-based and have demonstrated effectiveness in decreasing complications and associated consequences. However, their adoption in Australia has been limited and the reason for this is unclear. This study aimed to describe clinicians' perceptions of ERAS protocols in Australia.

Methods: A national online survey of anaesthetists, surgeons and nurses was undertaken. Invitations to participate were distributed via emails from professional colleges. The 30-item survey captured respondent characteristics, ERAS perceptions, beliefs, education and learning preferences and future planning considerations. The final question was open-ended for elaboration of perceptions of ERAS. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to describe and compare group differences across disciplines relative to perceptions of ERAS.

Results: The sample included 178 responses (116 nurses, 65.2%; 36 surgeons, 20.2%; 26 anaesthetists, 14.6%) across six states and two territories. More than half (n = 104; 58.8%) had used ERAS protocols in patient care, and most perceived they were 'very knowledgeable' (n = 24; 13.6%) or 'knowledgeable' (n = 71; 40.3%) of ERAS. However, fewer nurses had cared for a patient using ERAS (p <.01) and nurses reported lower levels of knowledge (p <.001) than their medical counterparts. Most respondents agreed ERAS protocols improved patient care and financial efficiency and were a reasonable time investment (overall Md 3-5), but nurses generally recorded lower levels of agreement (p.013 to < 0.001). Lack of information was the greatest barrier to ERAS knowledge (n = 97; 62.6%), while seminars/lectures from international and national leaders were the preferred learning method (n = 59; 41.3%). Most supported broad implementation of ERAS (n = 130; 87.8%).

Conclusion: There is a need to promote ERAS and provide education, which may be nuanced based on the results, to improve implementation in Australia. Nurses particularly need to be engaged in ERAS protocols given their significant presence throughout the surgical journey. There is also a need to co-design implementation strategies with stakeholders that target identified facilitators and barriers, including lack of support from senior administration, managers and clinicians and resource constraints.

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临床医生对 "加强术后恢复"(ERAS)以提高手术患者安全的看法:澳大利亚全国调查。
背景:手术患者面临术后并发症的风险,这可能导致发病率、死亡率、住院时间和医疗费用的增加。术后恢复强化方案(ERAS®)以证据为基础,在减少并发症和相关后果方面效果显著。然而,这些方案在澳大利亚的应用却很有限,原因尚不清楚。本研究旨在描述澳大利亚临床医生对 ERAS 协议的看法:方法:对麻醉师、外科医生和护士进行了一次全国性在线调查。专业学院通过电子邮件发出了参与邀请。调查共 30 个项目,包括受访者的特征、对 ERAS 的看法、信念、教育和学习偏好以及对未来规划的考虑。最后一个问题是开放式的,用于阐述对 ERAS 的看法。我们使用了描述性和推论性统计方法来描述和比较各学科对 ERAS 的看法的群体差异:样本包括六个州和两个地区的 178 份答复(护士 116 份,占 65.2%;外科医生 36 份,占 20.2%;麻醉师 26 份,占 14.6%)。半数以上(104 人;58.8%)的护士在患者护理中使用过 ERAS 协议,大多数护士认为自己对 ERAS "非常了解"(24 人;13.6%)或 "了解"(71 人;40.3%)。然而,使用过ERAS护理病人的护士人数较少(P 结论):有必要在澳大利亚推广ERAS并提供教育(根据结果可能会有细微差别),以改善ERAS的实施情况。鉴于护士在整个手术过程中的重要作用,他们尤其需要参与ERAS方案。此外,还需要与利益相关者共同制定实施策略,针对已发现的促进因素和障碍,包括缺乏高级行政人员、管理人员和临床医生的支持以及资源限制等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
8.10%
发文量
37
审稿时长
9 weeks
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