Roger France, Francis
[UCL]
Lefebvre, Chantal
[UCL]
Preoperative medical evaluation is needed to assess individual patients risks of perioperative morbidity and mortality. The content of the preoperative examination remains the object of discussion. Although a well documented preoperative assessment of a patient's health status might allow to optimise his condition before surgery and to plan the most appropriate perioperative management, leading to an improvement of perioperative outcome as well as a reduction in costs, data to support this claim are still most often indirect.
A large number of patients remain asymptomatic, with normal tests, which raises questions about the appropriateness to request a battery of tests on every candidate to surgery. Patients risks should be assessed mainly by history and physical examination, which might reduce drastically preoperative indication of laboratory tests : age, operation site, preoperative diseases and emergent surgery are important factors to consider.
A risk estimate is presented, as well as recommendations for a preoperative health assessment, by categories of patients, following a screening pathway. Costs have been estimated in various alternatives. They have been evaluated to be above 2 billion BEF per year in Belgium for 563,485 surgical cases, and could most likely be reduced by about 60% in a near future.
Bibliographic reference |
Roger France, Francis ; Lefebvre, Chantal. Cost-effectiveness of preoperative examinations.Belgian-Society-of-Internal-Medicine Symposium on Peri-Operative Care (BRUSSELS (Belgium), Feb 01, 1997). In: Acta Clinica Belgica (Multilingual Edition), Vol. 52, no. 5, p. 275-286 (1997) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/62589 |