The process whereby medical assistance is reorganized along business lines encourages the institution of a new health model in which clinical effectiveness is wedded to efficiency in the use of resources. Answering to these needs is the introduction, within surgical disciplines, of treatments carried out on a day surgery basis. The analysis of situations of possible professional blame in such new surgical alternatives means keeping factors peculiar to day surgery firmly in mind. The present paper analyses the regulations that permit the introduction day surgery. Special attention is paid to the type structures in which it can be carried out, and the need to identify basic technical and organizational aspects, with close cooperation between the surgical team, the anaesthesist, the radiology department, the cardiologist, and analysis laboratory possibly in “dedicated” structures. Bearing in mind the personal series, peculiar aspects are dealt with regarding the careful selection of patients, the risks connected with the problems of timely clinical control for postoperative complications and the programme of periodic outpatient controls. The patient will have to give his/her consensus for surgery after careful assessment and information on the risk-benefit ratio with respect to other medical or alternative surgery solutions, considering the undeniable advantage but at the same time the need for adequate cooperation of the patient and family physician for a prudent management at home and timely recourse to the day surgery structure in case of need. The suggestion is, however, that care should be taken before extending complex operations to the day surgery structure, a situation which might inevitably involve, in cases where the result is not completely favourable, a hypothesis of blame for the surgeon for negligence.

Schillaci, D., Pellegrinelli, M., Morini, O. (2004). Day surgery: aspetti medico-legali. MINERVA MEDICOLEGALE, 124(1), 23.

Day surgery: aspetti medico-legali

SCHILLACI, DANIELA ROBERTA;PELLEGRINELLI, MOIRA;MORINI, OSVALDO
2004

Abstract

The process whereby medical assistance is reorganized along business lines encourages the institution of a new health model in which clinical effectiveness is wedded to efficiency in the use of resources. Answering to these needs is the introduction, within surgical disciplines, of treatments carried out on a day surgery basis. The analysis of situations of possible professional blame in such new surgical alternatives means keeping factors peculiar to day surgery firmly in mind. The present paper analyses the regulations that permit the introduction day surgery. Special attention is paid to the type structures in which it can be carried out, and the need to identify basic technical and organizational aspects, with close cooperation between the surgical team, the anaesthesist, the radiology department, the cardiologist, and analysis laboratory possibly in “dedicated” structures. Bearing in mind the personal series, peculiar aspects are dealt with regarding the careful selection of patients, the risks connected with the problems of timely clinical control for postoperative complications and the programme of periodic outpatient controls. The patient will have to give his/her consensus for surgery after careful assessment and information on the risk-benefit ratio with respect to other medical or alternative surgery solutions, considering the undeniable advantage but at the same time the need for adequate cooperation of the patient and family physician for a prudent management at home and timely recourse to the day surgery structure in case of need. The suggestion is, however, that care should be taken before extending complex operations to the day surgery structure, a situation which might inevitably involve, in cases where the result is not completely favourable, a hypothesis of blame for the surgeon for negligence.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
ambulatory surgycal procedures, complications, medical liability, forensic medecine
Italian
mar-2004
124
1
23
none
Schillaci, D., Pellegrinelli, M., Morini, O. (2004). Day surgery: aspetti medico-legali. MINERVA MEDICOLEGALE, 124(1), 23.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/3372
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