Aim 1) To review current practice in the diagnosis and management of peri-orbital and orbital cellulitis in children at a London University Teaching Hospital. 2) To design and implement a streamlined, multi-specialty care pathway to improve the quality of care. Background Clinical differentiation between peri-orbital cellulitis and orbital cellulitis is often difficult, especially in young children. Early recognition and aggressive, multi-specialty treatment are required in order to prevent any vision and life-threatening sequelae. Method A retrospective case note analysis was performed for all paediatric patients with suspected peri-orbital or orbital cellulitis over a nineteen-month period. Extensive literature review was undertaken to ascertain current best practice in diagnosis and management. A streamlined, multi-specialty care pathway was developed, ratified by specialist departments, and introduced to optimise safety and quality of care. Results The results correlate with trends found in recent literature. 94.3% of patients had a blood culture taken with only 9.1% being positive. There were inadequate eye (37.1%) and endonasal (17.1%) cultures. Wide variation was noted in the criteria for imaging and in the antibiotic regimen used. 25.7% of patients received any nasal treatment. Suboptimal specialist review was identified in both orbital (60%) and peri-orbital (50.0%) cellulitis. Conclusions The new care pathway clearly informs investigation and empiric treatment based on initial risk stratification. The paediatric team is now the main, named care provider responsible for coordinating specialist input.
Aim To determine the necessity and cost effectiveness of routine blood group and save tests (G&S) before thyroidectomy Background Sub-total or total thyroidectomy is the mainstay of treatment for several thyroid disorders. The incidence of post-thyroidectomy haemorrhage has been reported between 0.36% and 4.3% in the literature. Many patients undergo routine G&S testing in anticipation of a peri-operative haemorrhage requiring blood transfusion. Method Retrospective review identified 276 patients undergoing an elective total or sub-total thyroidectomy at a London University Teaching Hospital between February 2018 and August 2020. Electronic medical and transfusion department records were audited to identify patients who had pre-operative G&S tests, pre-operatively reserved blood products and peri-operative transfusions. Results 261 (94.6%) patients had a valid pre-operative group and save test. 17 (6.16%) patients had a total of 61 units of blood products ordered pre-operatively. Only 2 patients required transfusion. Conclusions The blood transfusion rate for elective thyroidectomies at this centre was 0.72%. Routine G&S tests cost the trust thousands of pounds and create unnecessary burden on healthcare providers’ time and hospital resources. We propose that routine pre-operative G&S tests are unnecessary for elective thyroidectomies.
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