Surgeon accountability for patient safety in the Acute Care Surgery paradigm: a critical appraisal and need of having a focused knowledge of the patient and a specific subspecialty experience

Patient Saf Surg. 2015 Nov 13:9:38. doi: 10.1186/s13037-015-0084-3. eCollection 2015.

Abstract

There is an increasing evidence in the literature showing that Acute Care surgical patients, likewise patients from every other surgical subspeciality, should be best first approached and managed only by attending surgeons with approriate expertise in the field of Emergency and Trauma Surgery, as well as the occurrence of postoperative complications can be prevented or safely and appropriately treated when arising, only by those attending surgeons having a focused knowledge of the patient and specific subspeciality experience. The advantages of a consultant-led, patient-centered surgical management come along with the opportunity of maintaining the principles of continuity of care and specificity of expertise in managing surgical patients and their complications and readmissions. These principles should be particularly valid in the well-recognized subspeciality of Acute Care and Trauma Surgery; managing the challenging emergency surgical patients either in the preoperative and postoperative periods with the aim to improve the outcomes of Emergency Surgery, should only be by surgeons trained and experienced in both Acute Care Surgery and Trauma.

Keywords: Consultant-led surgical service; Continuity of care; Dedicated acute surgical admission ward; Emergency surgery management and outcomes; Outcomes; Postoperative morbidity; Risk of mortality after major surgery; Specificity of expertise; Surgical postoperative complications; Surgical ward-care checklists.