
Leading Medicine with Houston Methodist
Leading Medicine with Houston Methodist is for physicians and researchers. Each episode, our hosts are joined by experts to explore a topic, trend or innovation in healthcare. Quality Time with Dr. Shlomit Schaal focuses on quality and safety within healthcare systems.
At Houston Methodist, our commitment is to develop and move the best, most innovative science and technology from the bench to the bedside through translational research, interdisciplinary programs and continued education. We are proud to be a top hospital in Texas and the nation.
For more on our latest research, check out our Leading Medicine blog at https://www.houstonmethodist.org/leading-medicine-blog/
Leading Medicine with Houston Methodist
Standardizing Surgical Care to Improve Outcomes| Quality Time with Dr. Schaal
Preventing infection and enhancing recovery are metrics for surgical quality of care. In this episode, Dr. Pedro Ramirez discusses efforts to standardize patient care, including implementing surgical site infection bundles and Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) initiatives before, during and after surgery to improve and improve patient outcomes.
Expert: Dr. Pedro Ramirez, chairman of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Houston Methodist Hospital and the Alan L. Kaplan Chair in Obstetrics and Gynecology
Notable topics covered:
- The use of surgical site bundles to standardize care and decrease surgical-site infection
- The use of Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) guidelines preoperatively, intraoperatively and postoperatively to improve outcomes
- The findings of the Prospective Randomized Study Evaluating the Surgical Approach to Patients with Early Cervical Cancer that changed National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines
Links:
- ERAS®
- Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (Book)
- The ERAS® Society Handbook for Obstetrics & Gynecology
- International Journal of Gynecological Cancer (IJGC)
- International Journal of Gynecological Cancer Podcast
- Principles of Gynecologic Oncology Surgery
- Pivotal Cervical Cancer Study Finds Open Surgery Superior to Minimally Invasive Techniques