Performance of Perioperative Tasks for Women Undergoing Anti-incontinence Surgery Developed by the AUGS Quality Improvement and Outcomes Research Network
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-2023
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Abstract
Objectives
Surgery for the correction of stress urinary incontinence is an elective procedure that can have a dramatic and positive impact on quality of life. Anti-incontinence procedures, like inguinal hernia repairs or cholecystectomies, can be classified as high-volume/low-morbidity procedures. The performance of a standard set of perioperative tasks has been suggested as one way to optimize quality of care in elective high-volume/low-morbidity procedures. Our primary objective was to evaluate the performance of 5 perioperative tasks—(1) offering nonsurgical treatment, (2) performance of a standard preoperative prolapse examination, (3) cough stress test, (4) postvoid residual test, and (5) intraoperative cystoscopy for women undergoing surgery for stress urinary incontinence—compared among surgeons with and without board certification in female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery (FPMRS).
Study Design
This study was a retrospective chart review of anti-incontinence surgical procedures performed between 2011 and 2013 at 9 health systems. Cases were reviewed for surgical volume, adverse outcomes, and the performance of 5 perioperative tasks and compared between surgeons with and without FPMRS certification.
Results
Non-FPMRS surgeons performed fewer anti-incontinence procedures than FPMRS-certified surgeons. Female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery surgeons were more likely to perform all 5 perioperative tasks compared with non-FPMRS surgeons. After propensity matching, FPMRS surgeons had fewer patients readmitted within 30 days of surgery compared with non-FPMRS surgeons.
Conclusions
Female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery surgeons performed higher volumes of anti-incontinence procedures, were more likely to document the performance of the 5 perioperative tasks, and were less likely to have their patients readmitted within 30 days.
Repository Citation
Erekson, E.,
Whitcomb, E. L.,
Kamdar, N.,
Swift, S.,
Cundiff, G. W.,
Yaklic, J.,
Strohbehn, K.,
Adam, R.,
Danford, J.,
Willis-Gray, M. G.,
Maxwell, R. A.,
Edenfield, A.,
Pulliam, S.,
Gong, M.,
Malek, M.,
Hanissian, P.,
Towers, G.,
Guaderrama, N. M.,
Slocum, P.,
& Morgan, D.
(2023). Performance of Perioperative Tasks for Women Undergoing Anti-incontinence Surgery Developed by the AUGS Quality Improvement and Outcomes Research Network. Urogynecology, 29 (8), 660-669.
https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/obgyn/153
DOI
10.1097/SPV.0000000000001392