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  • About CPOC
    About CPOC
    • What is Perioperative Care?
      What is Perioperative Care?
      • The Case for Perioperative Care
    • CPOC Partners
      CPOC Partners
      • CPOC Board
      • CPOC Director
      • CPOC Advisory Group
    • Strategy and vision
      Strategy and vision
      • Current Workstreams
      • Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
    • CPOC Policy
      CPOC Policy
      • CPOC Welsh Manifesto: Unlocking NHS Productivity
      • CPOC Manifesto: a blueprint for NHS efficiency
      • Proving the Case for Perioperative Care
      • Multidisciplinary Working in Perioperative Care
      • Perceptions of perioperative care in the UK
  • News
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    • News
    • CPOC Newsletter
    • Follow us on X
  • For Patients
  • Guidelines & Resources
    Guidelines & Resources
    • Guidelines
      Guidelines
      • Prepared for Surgery, Ready for Recovery: Supporting Patients from Pre-op to Discharge
      • Anaemia in the Perioperative Pathway
      • Perioperative Management of Obstructive Sleep Apnoea in Adults
      • Perioperative Care of People Living with Frailty
      • The National Safety Standards for Invasive Procedures (NatSSIPs)
      • Perioperative Care of People with Diabetes
      • Day Surgery
      • Enhanced Perioperative Care
      • CPOC Endorsed Guidelines, Publications & Projects
    • Resources
      Resources
      • Improving Behaviours in Perioperative Care
      • SipTilSend
      • Assessment Tools
      • Patient Information Leaflets
      • Shared Decision Making for Clinicians
      • The Key to reducing waiting lists
      • Useful Links
    • Perioperative optimisation: Top seven interventions
      Perioperative optimisation: Top seven interventions
      • Alcohol moderation
      • Assessment, optimisation, shared decision making
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      • Practical preparation
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We've found 836 results

CPOC's response to Never Events consultation

CPOC responded to NHSE's Never Events consultation

Cancer prehabilitation, Northumbria Healthcare Trust

A blog by Dr Karin Ingram on cancer prehabiliation services within the Northumbria Healthcare Trust

Using Strategy and Organisational Structure to improve Perioperative Care

A blog by Dr Jennie Rechner describing how strategy and organisational structure was used to improve perioperative services at Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust

Intercollegiate Green Theatre Checklist

Intercollegiate Green Theatre Checklist

Older People Undergoing Surgery

Listing summary
Older People Undergoing Surgery

Geriatrician led multidisciplinary perioperative care of older patients

Listing summary
Geriatrician led multidisciplinary perioperative care of older patients

Physicians in Perioperative Medicine - the Bristol Experience

Listing summary
Physicians in Perioperative Medicine - the Bristol Experience

Describing the Need

Around 10 million patients undergo surgery each year in the NHS

Any healthcare pathway catering for a population of this size must be simple, safe and efficient. However, problems arise when we identify individual patients on this pathway who have complex medical needs. This simple care pathway can then feel inflexible, as we attempt to address different medical problems for each patient we see.

Fortunately, the great majority of patients are well served by existing NHS surgery pathways. However, there is a growing body of evidence that the needs of the high-risk surgical patient are not being met. As a result, patients who are older or have significant medical problems are offered major surgery in a system that cannot adapt to minimise their risk of complications.

Around 250,000 high-risk patients undergo surgery each year in the NHS. This is approximately 15% of all those who need surgery as a hospital inpatient. We believe these patients need extra care to ensure they have the best possible recovery after surgery, but any solution to this problem must function well within the existing high volume NHS surgical service.

Traditionally, the care of patients undergoing major surgery has been tailored to the operation itself and the index disease being treated by the procedure. However, the majority of complications, which occur after surgery are not due to technical errors or failures by the surgical team, but are medical complications such as pneumonia or myocardial infarction. The prevention and treatment of these medical complications requires a broader approach than we currently take to the care of the surgical patient.

Unmet need

The scale of this unmet need is becoming increasingly clear, and with 10 million patients undergoing surgery each year in the NHS, even a low rate of avoidable harm will be associated with many preventable complications and deaths. The long-term impact of this short-term postoperative harm is also increasing.

Some surgical specialties have already made good progress in improving the quality of perioperative care. Cardiac surgery provides an excellent example of an efficient patient-centred care pathway led by a multi-disciplinary team, achieving better outcomes than many other types of major surgery. We need to take a similar approach for patients undergoing all forms of surgery. To achieve this, we need to define an integrated agenda for healthcare policy around the challenge of providing healthcare to patients undergoing major surgery.

We believe that perioperative care provides a solution to the unmet need, using existing skills and expertise within the NHS to reduce variation and improve patient outcomes after surgery.

Welcome to our CPOC Fellow 2025/26

Dr Alex Isted will begin in post 05 August 2025

New PQIP 24-25 Report 6 Published

The report shows continued improvements

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