2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.surg.2014.03.030
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Impact of a 24-hour discharge pathway on outcomes of pediatric appendectomy

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Cited by 40 publications
(51 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
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“…pLOS in these cohorts is more often reported in hours rather than days; Halter et al and Alkhoury et al reported the shortest mean pLOS, being 2.5 (±1.26, range 1–5.5) hours and 4.8 (±2.1, range 1–12) hours respectively . Same‐day discharge was reported to have increased over three‐fold after introduction of an expedited care pathway from 12% to 42% of admissions in one study while Putnam et al reported an even more dramatic increase in same‐day discharge rates from 13% to 58% …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…pLOS in these cohorts is more often reported in hours rather than days; Halter et al and Alkhoury et al reported the shortest mean pLOS, being 2.5 (±1.26, range 1–5.5) hours and 4.8 (±2.1, range 1–12) hours respectively . Same‐day discharge was reported to have increased over three‐fold after introduction of an expedited care pathway from 12% to 42% of admissions in one study while Putnam et al reported an even more dramatic increase in same‐day discharge rates from 13% to 58% …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…This has also been seen in the pediatric population; Alkhoury and colleagues 11 successfully treated 80% of 158 eligible patients with outpatient laparoscopic appendectomy, resulting in decreased length of stay without increases in complications and with good parent satisfaction with the technique. In a similar study, Putnam and colleagues 22 reported 332 pediatric patients (58% outpatient) treated without an increase in complications, but they did report an increase in readmission rates (4.2% outpatient vs 1.2% admitted postoperatively). With regard to the adult population, DuBois and colleagues 13 report instituting an outpatient appendectomy protocol during a span of 161 patients (45% outpatient).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Finally, we were unable to account for other confounders such as hospitals' teaching status or the use of care pathways although the impact of teaching status is debated and fewer than 20% of hospitals are reported to use care pathways. [31][32][33] In summary, privately-insured children in Texas who received specialized care were younger, had more severe disease, and were hospitalized longer but were less likely to undergo preoperative CT. Although outcomes were similar between children receiving specialized and nonspecialized care, there is likely a role for specialized care for younger children and for those with more severe disease.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%