Journal of Acute Care Surgery (Nov 2022)

New Concept of a Surgical Hospitalist: Early Experience of Managing the Admission, Critical Care, Trauma Surgery Team

  • Sungho Lee,
  • Kwanhoon Park,
  • Kang Yoon Lee,
  • Ji Young Jang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17479/jacs.2022.12.3.91
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
pp. 91 – 96

Abstract

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The demand for hospitalists is increasing due to decreasing numbers of clinical residents and increased concerns regarding patient safety. However, several limitations in the surgical hospitalist role exist. The personnel of the surgical hospitalist, rapid response team (RRT), surgical critical care, and trauma surgery teams were unified under the admission, critical care, and trauma surgery (ACTs) team at this institution. The ACTs target are patients with severe disease not undergoing general postoperative course, or patients with the potential for severe conversion. Two surgical intensivists are on duty once a week and oversee the intensive care unit (ICU), the back-up treatment of critically ill patients, and the immediate treatment of trauma patients. ACTs also participate in the surgical RRT and select patients with a high probability of severe exacerbation. Between 2019–2021, the cardiopulmonary resuscitation incidence per 1,000 hospitalized patients in the surgical department decreased significantly from 0.81 to 0.55. From March to December 2021, the ACTs team were involved with 101 of 158 surgical patients admitted to the ICU: 62 with postoperative status, 29 with severe trauma, and 10 transferred to the ICU via RRT screening. Based on our experience, the role of the ACTs team can help improve patient safety.

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