Journal article
Differences in Perioperative Management of Patients Undergoing Complex Spine Surgery: A Global Perspective.
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Publication Details Author list: Blacker, Woody, Abate Shiferaw, Burbridge, Bustillo, Hazard, Heller, Lamperti, Mejia-Mantilla, Nadler, Rath, Robba, Vincent, Admasu, Awraris, Lele Publication year: 2024 Journal name in source: Journal of neurosurgical anesthesiology Volume number: 36 Issue number: 3 Start page: 218 End page: 227 Number of pages: 10 ISSN: 0898-4921 |
BACKGROUND\nMETHODS\nRESULTS\nCONCLUSIONS\nThe aim of this survey was to understand institutional spine surgery practices and their concordance with published best practices/recommendations.\nUsing a global internet-based survey examining perioperative spine surgery practice, reported institutional spine pathway elements (n=139) were compared with the level of evidence published in guideline recommendations. The concordance of clinical practice with guidelines was categorized as poor (≤20%), fair (21%-40%), moderate (41%-60%), good (61%-80%), or very good (81%-100%).\nSeventy-two of 409 (17.6%) institutional contacts started the survey, of which 31 (7.6%) completed the survey. Six (19.4%) of the completed surveys were from respondents in low/middle-income countries, and 25 (80.6%) were from respondents in high-income countries. Forty-one incomplete surveys were not included in the final analysis, as most were less than 40% complete. Five of 139 (3.6%) reported elements had very good concordance for the entire cohort; hospitals with spine surgery pathways reported 18 elements with very good concordance, whereas institutions without spine surgery pathways reported only 1 element with very good concordance. Reported spine pathways included between 7 and 47 separate pathway elements. There were 87 unique elements in the reviewed pathways. Only 3 of 87 (3.4%) elements with high-quality evidence demonstrated very good practice concordance.\nThis global survey-based study identified practice variation and low adoption rates of high-quality evidence in the care of patients undergoing complex spine surgery.
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