Synergistic use of Unplanned Reoperation and Hospital Readmission rates for quality monitoring in pediatric surgical care
Topic overview
This six-year observational study analyzed unplanned reoperations (0.58%) and readmissions (0.31%) in 6,376 pediatric surgeries, finding emergency cases carry higher risk than elective procedures. Technical surgical errors drove most reoperations while treatment errors caused readmissions, with appendicitis being the most common associated diagnosis.
Key takeaways
- Unplanned reoperations (0.58%) occur nearly twice as often as unplanned readmissions (0.31%) in pediatric surgery quality monitoring.
- Emergency surgeries carry 2-3× higher risk of reoperation or readmission compared to elective procedures (0.94% vs 0.35%).
- Technical surgical errors account for 70% of unplanned reoperations, while medical treatment errors cause 35% of readmissions.
- Appendicitis cases represent the highest-risk diagnosis for both unplanned reoperation and readmission events.
- Intra-abdominal infections are the most common indication requiring either reoperation or hospital readmission.
Keywords
Hashtags
Full article text
Full article text not available for this entry
How to cite: GlobalCastMD. Synergistic use of Unplanned Reoperation and Hospital Readmission rates for quality monitoring in pediatric surgical care. GlobalCastMD Medical Library. 2024-11-16. https://dev.library.globalcastmd.com/article/9434?via_space=staycurrentmd
Comments