The PSSS is a 6-point scale that is a valid measure of the effectiveness and quality of procedural sedation in children within the limits of the testing method used in this study.
Outcome analysis is essential to health care quality improvement efforts. Pediatric anesthesia faces unique challenges in analyzing outcomes. Anesthesia most often involves a one-time point of care interaction where work flow precludes detailed feedback to care givers. In addition, pediatric outcome evaluations must take into account patients' age, development, and underlying illnesses when attempting to establish benchmarks. The deployment of electronic medical records, including preoperative, operative, and postoperative data, offers an opportunity for creating datasets large and inclusive enough to overcome these potential confounders. At our institution, perioperative data exist in five distinct environments. In this study, we describe a method to integrate these datasets into a single web-based relational database that provides researchers and clinicians with regular anesthesia outcome data that can be reviewed on a daily, weekly, or monthly basis. Because of its complexity, the project also entailed the creation of a 'dashboard,' allowing tracking of data trends and rapid feedback of measured metrics to promote and sustain improvements. We present the first use of such a database and dashboard for pediatric anesthesia professionals as well as successfully demonstrating its capabilities to perform as described above.
Background: Research has improved practitioner awareness of the impact of individual characteristics on responses to painful procedures. However, there is little data relating preexisting temperament profiles and postsurgical/anesthesia outcomes in pediatric patients. In particular, it is not clear how best to identify which patients are at risk of poor postsurgical outcomes.Aim: In this prospective study, we examined relationships between preoperative measures of child temperament and postoperative pain/behavioral outcomes of children undergoing tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy surgeries. We sought to determine which temperament profiles were predictive of poor outcomes. Methods:After IRB approval and informed consent, validated temperament surveys were administered to the parents of a cohort of children undergoing tonsillectomy/ adenoidectomy surgery. These data were combined with preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative outcome measures collected from the electronic medical record utilizing a large integrated anesthesia outcome database. The dataset was further augmented with surveys addressing remote postoperative behaviors. Analysis of the temperament data yielded four groups (positive, negative, excitable, and inhibitory). The probability of high perioperative pain, agitation, emesis, and postoperative behavior changes based on cluster membership was then assessed. Results:A total of 260 patients undergoing tonsillectomy and/or adenoidectomy surgeries were enrolled in the study. ANOVA and chi-squared analyses indicated no statistically significant age, gender, or anesthesia technique differences across the four temperament clusters. Temperament cluster membership was not related to emesis, agitation, or behavioral changes. However, it was found to be predictive of high postoperative pain. Members of the excitable cluster (high positive and negative emotionality) were more likely to report high pain than those in positive cluster (high positive, low negative emotionality) (OR 7.97, 95% CI: 1.62-39.26; P < 0.05).Comparisons among other clusters were not significant. ConclusionOur data indicate that preoperative temperament characteristics may differentially influence pediatric postoperative pain experience in children. Specifically, children with high levels of positive and negative emotionality may exhibit more postsurgical pain behaviors.
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