The Thai anesthesia incidents study (THAI study) of ambulatory anesthesia: Part I: Method, geographic distribution and population

Background: There is a continuing trend to have more elective surgical operations performed on an outpatient basis. Objective: To determine the proportional distribution of anesthetic procedures performed in ambulatory elective surgery at different levels of hospitals across Thailand. Material and M...

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Main Authors: Srisawasdi S., Punjasawadwong Y., Werawatganon T., Pengpol W., Kongrit P., Rodanant O., Tanudsintum S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-34548668182&partnerID=40&md5=26bbbfd05c62e3eb613f534041cab61c
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/2170
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-21702014-08-30T02:00:33Z The Thai anesthesia incidents study (THAI study) of ambulatory anesthesia: Part I: Method, geographic distribution and population Srisawasdi S. Punjasawadwong Y. Werawatganon T. Pengpol W. Kongrit P. Rodanant O. Tanudsintum S. Background: There is a continuing trend to have more elective surgical operations performed on an outpatient basis. Objective: To determine the proportional distribution of anesthetic procedures performed in ambulatory elective surgery at different levels of hospitals across Thailand. Material and Method: A prospective and descriptive study was conducted at 20 hospitals comprising seven universities, five regional, four general and four district hospitals across Thailand. Consecutive outpatients who were undergoing elective surgical operation were included and their relevant data were selected and extracted for summary by using descriptive statistics. Results: From the database of 118,027 anesthetics performed for elective surgical operation, 7,786 (6.6%) were outpatients. According to this, 7,016 (90.1%) were practiced in university hospitals, 656 (8.4%) in regional or tertiary hospitals, 71 (.9%) in general or provincial hospitals, and 43 (0.6%) in district hospitals. The frequency of the ambulatory anesthesia was higher in hospitals in the central region, especially in university hospitals in Bangkok than in other regions. The majority of cases (86%) received their initial preanesthetic evaluation in the operating room while 12% were evaluated at the outpatient office. About 28% of the cases presented with pre-anesthetic abnormal conditions. The relatively common pre-anesthetic diseases were hypertension, diabetes mellitus, anemia, arrhythmia, and asthma. Conclusion: From the results of the present study, the authors have concluded that the rate of expansion of ambulatory anesthesia in Thailand is relatively slow, and varies according to the type of hospital and its geographic region. This indicates further studies should be formally conducted to determine factors affecting the practice of ambulatory surgery in Thailand. A large proportion of patients receive initial pre-anesthetic evaluation in the operating room on the day of surgery. This indicates that a system of pre-anesthetic evaluation should be set up for outpatients such as a pre-anesthetic care clinic should be set up for outpatients. 2014-08-30T02:00:33Z 2014-08-30T02:00:33Z 2007 Article 01252208 17926985 JMTHB http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-34548668182&partnerID=40&md5=26bbbfd05c62e3eb613f534041cab61c http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/2170 English
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
language English
description Background: There is a continuing trend to have more elective surgical operations performed on an outpatient basis. Objective: To determine the proportional distribution of anesthetic procedures performed in ambulatory elective surgery at different levels of hospitals across Thailand. Material and Method: A prospective and descriptive study was conducted at 20 hospitals comprising seven universities, five regional, four general and four district hospitals across Thailand. Consecutive outpatients who were undergoing elective surgical operation were included and their relevant data were selected and extracted for summary by using descriptive statistics. Results: From the database of 118,027 anesthetics performed for elective surgical operation, 7,786 (6.6%) were outpatients. According to this, 7,016 (90.1%) were practiced in university hospitals, 656 (8.4%) in regional or tertiary hospitals, 71 (.9%) in general or provincial hospitals, and 43 (0.6%) in district hospitals. The frequency of the ambulatory anesthesia was higher in hospitals in the central region, especially in university hospitals in Bangkok than in other regions. The majority of cases (86%) received their initial preanesthetic evaluation in the operating room while 12% were evaluated at the outpatient office. About 28% of the cases presented with pre-anesthetic abnormal conditions. The relatively common pre-anesthetic diseases were hypertension, diabetes mellitus, anemia, arrhythmia, and asthma. Conclusion: From the results of the present study, the authors have concluded that the rate of expansion of ambulatory anesthesia in Thailand is relatively slow, and varies according to the type of hospital and its geographic region. This indicates further studies should be formally conducted to determine factors affecting the practice of ambulatory surgery in Thailand. A large proportion of patients receive initial pre-anesthetic evaluation in the operating room on the day of surgery. This indicates that a system of pre-anesthetic evaluation should be set up for outpatients such as a pre-anesthetic care clinic should be set up for outpatients.
format Article
author Srisawasdi S.
Punjasawadwong Y.
Werawatganon T.
Pengpol W.
Kongrit P.
Rodanant O.
Tanudsintum S.
spellingShingle Srisawasdi S.
Punjasawadwong Y.
Werawatganon T.
Pengpol W.
Kongrit P.
Rodanant O.
Tanudsintum S.
The Thai anesthesia incidents study (THAI study) of ambulatory anesthesia: Part I: Method, geographic distribution and population
author_facet Srisawasdi S.
Punjasawadwong Y.
Werawatganon T.
Pengpol W.
Kongrit P.
Rodanant O.
Tanudsintum S.
author_sort Srisawasdi S.
title The Thai anesthesia incidents study (THAI study) of ambulatory anesthesia: Part I: Method, geographic distribution and population
title_short The Thai anesthesia incidents study (THAI study) of ambulatory anesthesia: Part I: Method, geographic distribution and population
title_full The Thai anesthesia incidents study (THAI study) of ambulatory anesthesia: Part I: Method, geographic distribution and population
title_fullStr The Thai anesthesia incidents study (THAI study) of ambulatory anesthesia: Part I: Method, geographic distribution and population
title_full_unstemmed The Thai anesthesia incidents study (THAI study) of ambulatory anesthesia: Part I: Method, geographic distribution and population
title_sort thai anesthesia incidents study (thai study) of ambulatory anesthesia: part i: method, geographic distribution and population
publishDate 2014
url http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-34548668182&partnerID=40&md5=26bbbfd05c62e3eb613f534041cab61c
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/2170
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