Perioperative Quality Initiative consensus statement on goal-directed haemodynamic therapy - British Journal of Anaesthesia www.bjanaesthesia.org/article/S000...
Posts by Helen
Major trauma is shifting. 🚑 The “typical” patient is now in their 60s, often with frailty & comorbidities. How should anaesthetists adapt to this new reality of silver trauma? Read more in #BJAEd: www.bjaed.org/article/S205...
Home-based prehabilitation: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised trials - British Journal of Anaesthesia www.bjanaesthesia.org/article/S000...
Can we optimise #perioperative team performance using 'team flow'? New single-centre qualitative study by Coss et al #humanfactors #performance #teamdynamics
www.bjanaesthesia.org/article/S000...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Mythbusting!
My favorite.
The NHS planning guidance - it's marching orders for the year - is out. More than a dozen national priorities have been dropped and the NHS faces more spending cuts.
As many in the NHS know, what matters is what is counted.
Read the guidance here: www.england.nhs.uk/operational-...
www.bmj.com/content/388/...
Systematic review and meta-analysis of 186 Prehabilitation RCTs. (15684 participants).
Combined exercise, psychosocial and nutritional interventions reduce LOS and complications
Join our monthly webinars at lunchtime on Prehabilitation and Rehabilitation every last Tuesday of the month from 1-2pm
Next one 28 January about the 'we are undefeatable campaign'
Join for free 👇
cpoc.org.uk/events/perio...
In collaboration with Macmillan and the Wessex Cancer Alliance
We partnered with Joe Wicks to create fitness videos for people to get active before surgery to help reduce complications
cpoc.org.uk/news/joe-wic... 💪
@thebodycoach.bsky.social @jkdhesi.bsky.social @gerisoc.bsky.social and @gstt-nhs.bsky.social
Definition and diagnostic criteria of clinical obesity - The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology www.thelancet.com/journals/lan...
cpoc.org.uk/get-involved...
A great opportunity to get involved in many different ways in the evolution of Perioperative medicine
From 2012-22, the prevalence of smoking amongst elective CABG patients was surprisingly low (9% vs. 13% in the UK population). Why are we seeing this difference? Are patients successfully quitting before surgery? tinyurl.com/ywcmds7e #Ansky #Medsky @ronellemouton.bsky.social @alexisted.bsky.social
Thank you @iainmoppett.bsky.social for this really helpful summary thread of the first major publication from SNAP-3. We are really grateful to all the local investigators and patients who contributed the study, thank you!
@rcoa-cri.bsky.social @bjajournals.bsky.social @anaesresidents.bsky.social
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39775660/
A review supporting the reality I see in my practice. How do we reach those in the greatest need?
associationofanaesthetists-publications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
Perioperative management of patients with XS alcohol use
Word of the day is one I mention often. To have the ‘mubble-fubbles’, in the 16th century, was to experience a fit of despondency or low spirits - another name for the Sunday blues.
associationofanaesthetists-publications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1...
Shared decision making
Word of the Day is ‘hunch-weather’ (19th century): weather so cold it makes you hunch your shoulders when you walk outside.
Passage from Carl Sagan’s A demon-haunted world book.
Some folks are pretty good seeing things coming.
Word of the Day is one I keep posting at the end of the year, hoping its time will come.
‘Respair’, from the 16th century, is fresh hope, and a recovery from despair.
Here’s to a few drops of respair in 2025.
Word of the day is most definitely ‘hurkle-durkling’ (19th-century Scots): to linger in bed long after it’s time to get up.