Abstract Aims Our unit had a significantly longer length of stay after thyroid surgery. We introduced change of practice through a standardised multidisciplinary postoperative care protocol. We analyse the effect of the protocol on postoperative length of stay and any impacts on patient safety. Methods A multidisciplinary protocol was implemented and embedded into clinical practice. Data was collected prospectively on consecutive patients undergoing thyroid surgery. Outcomes with reference to adverse events, length of stay and readmissions were audited. Comparisons were made with unit's pre-protocol data and national figures published in BAETS (British Association of Endocrine and thyroid Surgeons) audit report. Results A total of 78 patients underwent 37 total thyroidectomies and 41 lobectomies. Three (8.3%) of the total thyroidectomies had transient hypocalcaemia but none were permanent. None had voice changes or recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy. Three patients were reviewed few days after discharge with mild hypocalcaemia symptoms treated with calcium supplements. One was re-admitted 5 days post discharge with wound infection. Twenty-seven (75%) were discharged on 1st postoperative day as opposed to 0% pre-protocol (BAETS audit report 66%). Thirty-seven (90%) of lobectomies were discharged on 1st postoperative day (Units pre-protocol 42%, BAETS audit 81%). There was no postoperative bleed or hypocalcaemia. One patient with a large recurrent retrosternal goitre had transient recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy that recovered subsequently. There were no readmissions or adverse events directly related to early discharge. Conclusion A well embedded dedicated postoperative care protocol can significantly reduce postoperative hospital stay after thyroid surgery without compromising patient safety.
Read full abstract