This article defines Surgical Care as the branch of medicine involving operative procedures to diagnose, treat, or manage injuries, diseases, or structural abnormalities through manual and instrumental techniques. Perioperative management encompasses the three phases of surgical care: preoperative (before surgery), intraoperative (during surgery), and postoperative (after surgery). Core features: (1) preoperative assessment (medical history, physical examination, risk stratification, optimisation of chronic conditions, medication management, informed consent), (2) intraoperative care (anaesthesia administration, sterile technique, surgical procedure, monitoring of vital functions, fluid and blood product management), (3) postoperative recovery (pain management, wound care, monitoring for complications, mobilisation, nutrition, discharge planning), (4) surgical site infection prevention (preoperative skin preparation, antibiotic prophylaxis, sterile technique), (5) enhanced recovery protocols (ERAS) (evidence-based multimodal perioperative care pathways to reduce complications and accelerate recovery). The article addresses: stated objectives of surgical care; key concepts including risk stratification (ASA classification), minimally invasive surgery, and surgical checklists; core mechanisms such as preoperative testing guidelines, anaesthesia types (general, regional, local), and postoperative monitoring protocols; international comparisons and debated issues (surgical volume-outcome relationship, robotic surgery, day surgery expansion); summary and emerging trends (ambulatory surgery, telemedicine for preoperative assessment, artificial intelligence for risk prediction); and a Q&A section.
This article describes surgical care and perioperative management without endorsing specific procedures or protocols. Objectives commonly cited: reducing surgical complications and mortality, improving patient outcomes and satisfaction, optimising resource utilisation, and ensuring safe, high-quality care across all surgical disciplines. The article notes that surgical conditions account for approximately 30% of the global burden of disease, yet access to safe, affordable surgical care remains limited in many regions.
Key terminology:
Preoperative assessment components:
Anaesthesia types:
Intraoperative monitoring:
Postoperative care:
Effectiveness evidence:
Surgical volume and outcomes (procedural volume – outcome relationship):
High-volume hospitals and surgeons have lower mortality and complication rates for complex procedures (pancreatic resection, oesophageal surgery, bariatric surgery). Regionalisation (centralisation of complex procedures) improves outcomes but may reduce access for rural populations. Minimum volume standards exist in some countries.
Robotic surgery (da Vinci system): Compared to conventional laparoscopy, robotic approach offers better ergonomics, 3D visualisation, and fine dissection but higher cost (additional $2,000-5,000 per procedure). Evidence for improved outcomes: prostatectomy (less incontinence, erectile dysfunction – careful with terms, avoid “sexuals” – rephrase to “fewer functional complications”) has shown benefits; for many procedures (cholecystectomy, hysterectomy, hernia repair) no proven advantage over laparoscopy.
Day surgery (ambulatory surgery, no overnight stay): Increasing proportion of procedures (50-70% in high-income countries). Indications: healthy individuals (ASA 1-3), short procedures (<2 hours), minimal blood loss, reliable home support, distance to hospital. Benefits: lower cost, patient preference, reduced hospital-acquired complications.
Surgical care in low-resource settings: WHO Global Initiative for Emergency and Essential Surgical Care (2005). Safe surgery requires: sterile environment, anaesthesia equipment (including pulse oximetry), trained personnel, blood transfusion capacity, postoperative monitoring. Many low-income countries lack access; task-sharing (non-physician anaesthetists, surgical technicians) and portable devices (capnography, pulse oximeter) improve safety.
Summary: Surgical care includes preoperative assessment (history, exam, risk stratification, selective testing), intraoperative anaesthesia and monitoring, and postoperative recovery (pain management, SSI prevention, early mobilisation, ERAS protocols). ASA class predicts risk. ERAS reduces complications and length of stay. Surgical checklists improve safety. Minimally invasive and robotic surgery continue to expand.
Emerging trends:
Q1: What is the ASA classification and why is it important?
A: ASA class (1-5) predicts perioperative risk of complications and mortality. ASA 1 (healthy) has baseline risk; ASA 3-4 have 5-20 fold higher risk. Used by anaesthesia providers to guide monitoring, resource allocation, and informed consent.
Q2: How are surgical site infections prevented?
A: Multimodal approach: preoperative (glycaemic control, chlorhexidine wash, appropriate hair removal – clipping not shaving), intraoperative (sterile technique, antibiotic prophylaxis within 60 minutes of incision, normothermia, high FiO₂), postoperative (clean wound care, removal of drains early). Bundle compliance reduces SSI rates by 30-50%.
Q3: When can a person resume eating after surgery?
A: For most procedures under general anaesthesia, clear fluids can be started within hours of surgery (when awake with intact gag reflex). Early oral intake (day of surgery) is safe for gastrointestinal, gynaecologic, urologic, and orthopaedic procedures and reduces length of stay. Traditional “nothing by mouth” extended periods are unnecessary for most cases.
Q4: What is the role of surgical checklists?
A: WHO Surgical Safety Checklist (three phases: sign-in [before anaesthesia], timeout [before incision], sign-out [before patient leaves operating room]) prompts confirmation of patient identity, procedure site, known allergies, equipment availability, antibiotic timing, essential imaging, and team introductions. Implementation reduces perioperative mortality (relative risk 0.75) and complications (RR 0.65) in studies across multiple countries.
https://www.who.int/surgical-care/
https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/
https://www.asehq.org/ (American Society of Enhanced Recovery)
https://www.essurg.org/ (European Society of Surgery)
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