Diminished ovarian reserve is not associated with an increase in miscarriage among younger women achieving pregnancy through IVF. Elevated FSH is associated with a higher risk of IVF pregnancy loss among older patients. We found no evidence to confirm that diminished ovarian reserve is associated with increased aneuploidy among spontaneous abortions.
This article examines the social and physical causes of obstetric fistulas, as well as resulting social and psychological consequences. Preventative strategies are addressed using Niger as a microcosm for this devastating condition that affects two million women worldwide.
OBJECTIVE:
To implement a quality-improvement intervention aimed at reducing unnecessary opioid prescriptions for patients who are undergoing gynecologic surgery.
METHODS:
This was a retrospective cohort study that included data from the pre– and post–quality-improvement initiative cohorts. Patients at an urban, tertiary academic medical center who were undergoing scheduled minimally invasive surgery and open abdominal surgery by a gynecologic oncologist were included. Patients underwent preoperative counseling, standardization of perioperative analgesia, and a postoperative opioid prescribing algorithm. Descriptive statistics were calculated for demographic and perioperative characteristics, process measures, and outcome measures.
RESULTS:
A total of 532 abdominal surgeries were analyzed. The total percentage of patients discharged with an opioid prescription decreased from 82.7% (n=229/276) to 23.1% (n=59/256) (P<.001) and was significantly reduced for all routes of surgery. The mean number of opioid tablets prescribed for all patients was significantly reduced from 7.2 tablets (SD=5.7) to 1.8 tablets (SD=4.3) (P<.001). Eighty-three percent of patients (n=97/117) who underwent minimally invasive hysterectomy and were discharged on postoperative day 0 or day 1 were not provided an opioid prescription. Fifty-one percent of patients who underwent laparotomy were discharged without an opioid prescription. The percentage of patients who required an opioid refill or new prescription in the preintervention and postintervention cohorts remained constant (6.5%, n=18/276 vs 5.9%, n=15/256, P=.75), as did postoperative calls for pain (8.3%, n=23/276 vs 10.9%, n=33/256).
CONCLUSION:
Patients who are undergoing scheduled abdominal gynecologic surgery can be safely discharged without opioid prescriptions with appropriate education and perioperative analgesia prescribing practices. These protocols and prescribing practices profoundly limit opioid prescriptions, which is an important factor in combating the ongoing opioid crisis.
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