医学
预热
围手术期
重症监护医学
医疗保健
梅德林
大流行
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)
外科
物理疗法
疾病
病理
经济
法学
传染病(医学专业)
经济增长
政治学
作者
Olle Ljungqvist,Hans D. de Boer,Angie Balfour,William Fawcett,Dileep N. Lobo,Gregg Nelson,Michael J. Scott,Thomas W. Wainwright,Nicolas Demartines
出处
期刊:JAMA Surgery
[American Medical Association]
日期:2021-04-21
被引量:164
标识
DOI:10.1001/jamasurg.2021.0586
摘要
Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) is a global surgical quality improvement initiative now firmly entrenched within the field of perioperative care. Although ERAS is associated with significant clinical outcome improvements and cost savings in numerous surgical specialties, several opportunities and challenges deserve further discussion.Uptake and implementation of ERAS Society guidelines, together with ERAS-related research, have increased exponentially since the inception of the ERAS movement. Opportunities to further improve patient outcomes include addressing frailty, optimizing nutrition, prehabilitation, correcting preoperative anemia, and improving uptake of ERAS worldwide, including in low- and middle-income countries. Challenges facing enhanced recovery today include implementation, carbohydrate loading, reversal of neuromuscular blockade, and bowel preparation. The COVID-19 pandemic poses both a challenge and an opportunity for ERAS.To date, ERAS has achieved significant benefit for patients and health systems; however, improvements are still needed, particularly in the areas of patient optimization and systematic implementation. During this time of global crisis, the ERAS method of delivering care is required to take surgery and anesthesia to the next level and bring improvements in outcomes to both patients and health systems.
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