The Advancment & Uptake of an Enhanced Recovery After Cardiac Surgery Protocol
Penn collection
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total opioid administration
time to extubation
length of stay
Nursing
Post-BSN for Nurse Anesthetists (DNP-NA)
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Abstract
Liberal opioid administration during surgery leads to increased intubation time, intensive care unit and hospital length of stay, opioid-related adverse events, and health care costs. Patients undergoing cardiac surgery with and without preoperative opioid exposure are at an increased risk for opioid use disorder postoperatively. An enhanced recovery after cardiac surgery protocol with opioid minimization strategies was implemented since 2015 at a Philadelphia teaching hospital, but the effect on patient outcomes has never been analyzed. This quality improvement project conducted a retrospective chart review to evaluate the uptake and advancement of the enhanced recovery after cardiac surgery protocol. Primary outcomes of interest included total opioid administration, time to extubation (TTE), and length of stay (LOS). Pain scores, postoperative complications and 30-day readmissions were investigated as secondary outcomes. The statistically significant results comparing outcomes from 2016 to 2019 with an ERACS protocol are consistent with results of current evidence demonstrating improvements in total opioid consumption (p