Journal of the American College of Surgeons
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Patients with Complicated Intra-abdominal Infection Presenting with Sepsis Do Not Require Longer Duration of Antimicrobial Therapy.
A recent prospective, multicenter, randomized controlled trial found that 4 days of antibiotics after source control of complicated intra-abdominal infections resulted in similar outcomes when compared with longer duration. We hypothesized that the subset of patients presenting with sepsis have similar outcomes when treated with the shorter course of antibiotics. ⋯ There was no difference in outcomes between short and long-course antimicrobial therapy in patients with complicated intra-abdominal infection presenting with sepsis. Our findings suggest that the presence of systemic illness does not mandate a longer antimicrobial course if source control of complicated intra-abdominal infection is obtained.
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Comparative Study
Are Surgeons Being Paid Fairly by Medicaid? A National Comparison of Typical Payments for General Surgeons.
Both the Medicare (MCR) and Medicaid (MCD) programs turn 50 this year. Medicare has developed a national resource-based payment methodology for physicians' services, with broad input by specialty societies, and MCD payments are set by individual states by various means. ⋯ These findings call into question the fairness of MCD reimbursement for general surgery services in the United States. This discount to MCR could act as a disincentive for surgeons to care for some patients, based on the state of residence. These unexplained discounts could have considerable long-term effects for patients dependent on the MCD program. Our study should act as a stimulus for states to examine their payment methodologies to provide more uniform and fairer payments for surgical procedures.
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Laparoscopic appendectomy is typically associated with inpatient hospitalization averaging between 1 and 2 days. In July 2010, a prospective protocol for outpatient laparoscopic appendectomy was adopted at our institution. Patients were dismissed from the post-anesthesia recovery room or day surgery if they met certain predefined criteria. Patients admitted to a hospital room as either full admission or observation status were considered failures of outpatient management. ⋯ Outpatient laparoscopic appendectomy can be performed with a high rate of success, low morbidity, and low readmission rate. This protocol has withstood the test of time. Widespread adoption has the potential for substantial health care savings.
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Accidental injury of a nearby structure during surgical operations carries a risk of serious morbidity and mortality. Furthermore, it represents a medico-legal liability. We aimed to examine the national distribution, cost, and trend of accidental intraoperative injuries. ⋯ Certain demographic and clinical factors influence the risk of intraoperative injury of nearby structures. The prevalence of intraoperative injuries is increasing at the national level, and these injuries are associated with increased mortality and pose substantial clinical and financial burdens.
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Full trauma team activation in evaluating injured patients is based on triage criteria and associated with significant costs and resources that should be focused on patients who truly need them. Overtriage leads to inefficient care, particularly when resources are finite, and it diverts care from other vital areas. Although shock and gunshot wounds to the abdomen are accepted indicators for full trauma activation, intubation as the sole criterion is controversial. We evaluated our experience to assess if intubation alone merited the highest level of trauma activation. ⋯ When appropriately triaged, selected intubated trauma patients do not require full trauma activation to receive timely, efficient care.