🏥 GCC Clinical Guide

Surgical Ward Nursing
Guide for GCC

Comprehensive perioperative nursing covering pre-op assessment, post-op care, wound management, complications, discharge planning — aligned with JCI and ERAS standards in GCC hospitals.

8
Major Topics
15
Quiz Questions
ERAS
Protocol Ready
JCI
Aligned

⚡ Quick Reference

ERASCarbohydrate load + minimal fasting + early mobilisation + multimodal analgesia
VTE ProphylaxisLMWH + mechanical (TED stockings + pneumatic compression)
SSI SignsREEDA: Redness, Oedema, Ecchymosis, Discharge, Approximation
Drain Removal<30 mL/24hr output for closed suction drain removal
EviscerationSaline-moistened sterile drape + immediate surgical emergency
Fasting (ERAS)Solids 6hr, clear fluids 2hr pre-operatively
Post-op ObsQ15min ×1hr → Q30min ×2hr → Q1hr ×4hr → Q4hr stable
Discharge MEWSMEWS <3, oral intake tolerated, pain controlled

Pre-operative Care

🔍 Pre-operative Assessment

History Taking

  • Presenting complaint and planned procedure
  • Past medical and surgical history
  • Previous anaesthetic history (including complications, family history of anaesthetic reactions)
  • Bleeding disorders, haematological conditions
  • Cardiovascular and respiratory history
  • Renal and hepatic function
  • Diabetes, thyroid, and endocrine disorders
  • Smoking, alcohol, recreational drug use

Allergies

  • Document ALL allergies — drug, food, latex, contrast dye, adhesive
  • Record type of reaction (anaphylaxis vs intolerance vs side effect)
  • Ensure allergy band applied BEFORE entering theatre
  • Alert anaesthetist to latex allergy — theatre must be latex-free

Current Medications — Critical Review

AnticoagulantsWarfarin: stop 5 days prior, check INR. DOAC (rivaroxaban, apixaban): stop 24–48hr. LMWH bridging per anaesthetist plan.
AntiplateletsAspirin: may continue for cardiac stents. Clopidogrel: stop 5–7 days — discuss with surgeon and cardiologist. NEVER stop dual antiplatelet without cardiologist input if recent stent.
Diabetic MedicationsMetformin: withhold day of surgery (lactic acidosis risk with contrast). Insulin: sliding scale protocol. SGLT2 inhibitors: stop 3 days prior (euDKA risk). GLP-1 agonists: discuss with team re: delayed gastric emptying.
Other Key MedicationsNSAIDs: stop 3–5 days. ACEi/ARBs: often held morning of surgery (hypotension). Herbal supplements: stop 2 weeks prior (garlic, ginkgo, ginseng increase bleeding).

ASA Physical Status Classification

ASA GradeClassificationExamplesAnaesthetic Risk
Grade 1Normal healthy patientNo medical conditions, non-smoker, non-obeseMinimal
Grade 2Mild systemic diseaseWell-controlled DM, HTN, mild asthma, smoker, BMI <40Low
Grade 3Severe systemic diseasePoorly controlled DM/HTN, COPD, morbid obesity, active heart failureModerate
Grade 4Severe, life-threatening diseaseRecent MI (<3mo), CVA, ongoing cardiac ischaemia, renal failure on dialysisHigh
Grade 5Moribund — not expected to surviveRuptured aortic aneurysm, massive trauma, intracranial bleedVery High
Grade 6Brain-dead organ donorOrgan retrieval surgery

Interactive Pre-operative Checklist

Click each item to mark complete. Progress is saved locally.

Pre-op Checklist Progress0 / 12
  • Informed consent signed — procedure explained, patient verbally confirms understanding, consent form signed by surgeon and patient
  • NBM confirmed — solids ≥6hr, clear fluids ≥2hr, medications taken as instructed
  • Surgical site marking — correct site verified with patient awake, initials by operating surgeon
  • Compression stockings applied — correct size TED stockings fitted, no contraindications (PVD, open wounds)
  • Pre-op bloods reviewed — FBC, U&E, LFTs, coagulation, group and screen (G&S) or cross-match
  • ECG reviewed — particularly for patients ≥40 years or cardiac history
  • Chest X-ray available — if indicated (respiratory history, cardiac disease, age policy)
  • Allergy band applied — red allergy band confirmed; "NKDA" band if no known drug allergies
  • Jewellery, nail polish, makeup removed — rings taped if cannot be removed, pulse ox confirmed functional
  • Prosthetics removed — dentures, hearing aids, spectacles, contact lenses, prosthetic limbs stored safely
  • Pre-medication given — anxiolytic/pre-med administered as prescribed, time and route documented
  • Patient ID verified — name, DOB, MRN confirmed against wristband and consent form (two identifiers)

🚀 Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS)

ERAS Standard in GCC JCI HospitalsERAS protocols are now standard of care in JCI-accredited hospitals across UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Kuwait. Nurses must understand and facilitate all components.

Pre-operative ERAS

  • Patient education and goal-setting
  • Carbohydrate loading: 800mL high-CHO drink the evening before, 400mL 2–3hr before surgery
  • Minimise fasting: solids 6hr, clear fluids 2hr only
  • Stop smoking and alcohol 4–8 weeks before elective surgery
  • Optimise medical conditions pre-op (anaemia, nutrition, diabetes control)
  • Avoid bowel preparation unless absolutely necessary (colorectal)

Intra-operative ERAS

  • Goal-directed fluid therapy (avoid over/under hydration)
  • Avoid hypothermia: warming blankets, warmed IV fluids
  • Minimally invasive surgery (laparoscopic where possible)
  • Avoid routine use of nasogastric tubes
  • Regional anaesthesia preferred to reduce opioid requirements
  • Short-acting anaesthetic agents for rapid emergence

Post-operative ERAS

  • Early oral intake — fluids within 2–4hr of recovery
  • Early mobilisation — sit out Day 0, ambulate Day 1
  • Multimodal analgesia — avoid high-dose opioids
  • Prophylactic antiemetics (PONV protocol)
  • Remove catheters and drains early
  • Daily targets documented (fluid, mobility, diet)
  • Discharge when criteria met — not by day number

🌍 WHO Surgical Safety Checklist

Sign In (Before Anaesthesia)
  • Patient confirmed identity, site, procedure, consent
  • Site marked (if applicable)
  • Anaesthesia machine and medication check complete
  • Pulse oximeter on and functioning
  • Allergies known?
  • Difficult airway/aspiration risk?
  • Risk of blood loss >500mL?
Time Out (Before Skin Incision)
  • All team members introduced by name and role
  • Surgeon, anaesthetist, nurse verbally confirm patient, site, procedure
  • Antibiotic prophylaxis given within 60 min?
  • Anticipated critical events reviewed
  • Imaging displayed if needed?
  • Sterility confirmed
Sign Out (Before Patient Leaves Theatre)
  • Nurse verbally confirms: procedure recorded
  • Instrument, sponge, needle counts correct
  • Specimen labelled correctly
  • Equipment problems identified and addressed
  • Surgeon, anaesthetist, nurse review key recovery concerns

💉 VTE Prophylaxis

Caprini Risk Score

ScoreRisk LevelRecommendation
0–1LowEarly mobilisation only
2ModerateMechanical + consider LMWH
3–4HighLMWH + mechanical
≥5Very HighLMWH + mechanical + extended prophylaxis 4 weeks

Caprini Score Factors

  • 1 point each: age 41–60, minor surgery, BMI >25, varicose veins, swollen legs, oral contraceptive/HRT, recent MI/CHF/sepsis
  • 2 points each: age 61–74, arthroscopy, malignancy, confined to bed >72hr, plaster cast, central venous access
  • 3 points each: age ≥75, previous VTE, family history DVT, Factor V Leiden, prothrombin mutation
  • 5 points each: stroke <1mo, elective arthroplasty, hip/pelvis/leg fracture, acute spinal cord injury

Mechanical Prophylaxis

  • TED (thrombo-embolic deterrent) stockings: ensure correct sizing, apply pre-operatively, remove and reapply daily, inspect skin
  • Pneumatic compression devices (IPC): apply in theatre, run continuously until mobile
  • Contraindications: peripheral arterial disease, leg ischaemia, open wounds, suspected DVT

Pharmacological Prophylaxis

LMWH (Low Molecular Weight Heparin) Enoxaparin 40mg SC daily (standard) or 20mg if CrCl <30. First dose 6–12hr post-op. Continue until mobile or as per protocol (extended to 28 days for major cancer/orthopaedic surgery).
Monitoring No routine anti-Xa monitoring except renal impairment, extremes of weight, or pregnancy. Monitor platelets — HIT risk (rare with LMWH). Check renal function for dose adjustment.

Patient Education

  • Explain rationale for stockings and injections
  • Encourage foot and ankle exercises in bed
  • Encourage early ambulation — most effective VTE prevention
  • Teach signs of DVT (calf pain, swelling) and PE (chest pain, dyspnoea)

📚 Pre-operative Patient Education

Breathing Exercises

Teach pre-op to reduce post-op pulmonary complications

Deep Breathing

Inhale slowly through nose, hold 3 sec, exhale through pursed lips. Repeat 10 times hourly post-op.

Incentive Spirometer

Slow, deep inhalation to achieve target volume. 10 repetitions hourly while awake.

Effective Coughing

Splint wound with pillow. Deep breath → hold 2 sec → huff cough (2 short) → strong cough. Clears secretions without wound strain.

Expected Recovery

  • Pain is expected but will be managed — report pain score >4/10
  • IV fluids initially, then oral fluids when tolerated
  • Catheter may be present — usually removed Day 1
  • Drains if present — do not pull or adjust
  • First mobilisation with nurse support Day 0 or Day 1
  • Wound will be checked daily — some ooze normal initially
  • Possible post-op nausea — medications available

GCC-Specific Education Points

Cultural Considerations Many GCC patients prefer family involvement in decision-making. Ensure patient's own consent is obtained with interpreter if needed. Family pressure for early discharge must be balanced against safety — document clearly.
Ramadan Considerations Muslim patients may refuse pre-op medications during Ramadan. Consult Islamic scholar guidance — injections for treatment purposes are generally permissible. Document patient's preferences and escalate to surgeon if fasting compromises safety.

Post-operative Care

🩺 ABCDE Post-operative Assessment

A

Airway

  • Airway patent?
  • Talking clearly?
  • Secretions/stridor?
  • Airway adjunct in situ?
  • Swallow reflex returned?
B

Breathing

  • SpO2 — target ≥94%
  • Respiratory rate (12–20)
  • Breath sounds equal?
  • Oxygen delivery device
  • Signs of respiratory distress
C

Circulation

  • Heart rate and rhythm
  • Blood pressure
  • CRT <2 seconds?
  • Peripheral perfusion
  • Wound/drain bleeding
  • IV access patent
D

Disability

  • GCS / AVPU
  • Pain score (0–10 NRS)
  • Sedation score (RASS)
  • Blood glucose (DM)
  • Pupils if neurological
E

Exposure

  • Temperature
  • Fluid balance (input/output)
  • Drain output and character
  • Urine output ≥0.5mL/kg/hr
  • Wound inspection
  • Pressure areas

📊 Vital Signs Monitoring Frequency

Standard Post-operative Observation ProtocolFollow locally agreed escalation thresholds. Increase frequency if patient deteriorates at any stage.

Every 15 minutes × 1 hour (first hour post-op)

Highest monitoring intensity. Patient most at risk in immediate post-operative period. Monitor: BP, HR, SpO2, RR, pain, level of consciousness, wound/drain output.

Every 30 minutes × 2 hours

Vital signs stabilising. Continue analgesia titration. First mobilisation may commence. Catheter and drain output charted.

Every 1 hour × 4 hours

Patient more stable. Oral fluids commenced if tolerated. Pain managed on oral regimen if possible. Physiotherapy review for breathing exercises.

Every 4 hours if stable

Routine post-operative monitoring. MEWS ≤2. Preparing for ward ambulation and ERAS milestones.

⚠️

Escalation Thresholds

Escalate immediately if: HR <40 or >130, SBP <90 or >200, SpO2 <90%, RR <8 or >30, GCS drop ≥2 points, urine output <30mL/hr for 2 hours, temperature <35°C or >38.5°C, MEWS ≥5.

💊 Post-operative Pain Management

WHO Analgesic Ladder (Modified for Post-op)

Step 1 — Non-opioid (Regular)

Paracetamol 1g IV/oral QID (max 4g/24hr). Celecoxib or ibuprofen if no contraindications (renal, GI, cardiac risk assessment first).

Step 2 — Weak Opioid/Adjunct PRN

Tramadol 50–100mg oral/IV PRN Q6H. Codeine 30–60mg oral PRN (avoid in poor metabolisers). Ketamine sub-anaesthetic doses (opioid-sparing).

Step 3 — Strong Opioid PRN/PCA

Morphine or oxycodone IV. PCA: morphine 1mg bolus, 5 min lockout, 4hr limit 20–30mg. Fentanyl PCA for renal impairment.

Regional / Epidural

For major abdominal, thoracic, orthopaedic surgery. Reduces systemic opioid requirements significantly.

PCA Monitoring

  • Check: drug, concentration, bolus dose, lockout interval — against prescription
  • Monitor sedation score (RASS/Ramsay) EVERY observation cycle
  • Respiratory rate ≥8 before each PCA top-up
  • Pain score at rest and on movement
  • 24hr usage — if >30 attempts with <50% delivery, pain may be uncontrolled
  • Naloxone 0.4mg IV available at all times

Epidural Management

Epidural Monitoring Essentials Sensory level check (ice/cold) every 4hr. Motor block (Bromage scale) — if ≥2, reduce rate and alert anaesthetist. Hypotension common (sympathetic blockade) — ensure adequate IV fluids. Monitor for epidural haematoma: back pain + bilateral motor weakness = EMERGENCY.

PONV Management

  • Ondansetron 4mg IV Q6–8H (serotonin antagonist)
  • Metoclopramide 10mg IV TDS (prokinetic)
  • Cyclizine 50mg IV/IM TDS
  • Dexamethasone 4–8mg IV (reduces PONV and inflammation)
  • Position: semi-recumbent, avoid sudden movement
  • Ginger tea (patient preference — culturally accepted in GCC)

💧 Post-operative Fluid Management

IV to Oral Transition (ERAS)

Recovery / Day 0

IV maintenance fluids running. Offer sips of water when swallow confirmed. Antiemetics given prophylactically.

Day 1

Oral fluids freely if tolerating. IV fluids reduced — use IV only for drug administration. Document all intake.

Day 1–2

Soft diet commenced. IV cannula removed. Full oral hydration target ≥1500mL/day minimum.

Fluid Balance Monitoring

  • Strict input/output: all IV fluids, oral intake, blood products, NG output, drain output, urine, stool
  • Target urine output ≥0.5mL/kg/hr (30–40mL/hr minimum)
  • 12hr and 24hr cumulative balance calculated
  • Positive balance >2L = alert team (fluid overload risk)
  • Daily weights recommended in high-risk patients

Post-operative Urinary Retention

Risk Factors Male gender, prostate enlargement, epidural analgesia, opioid analgesia, anticholinergic medications, pelvic or perineal surgery, prolonged catheterisation prior to surgery.

Management Protocol

  • Bladder scan if patient unable to void 4–6hr post-op
  • Scan volume >400mL: in-out (straight) catheterisation
  • Scan volume >600mL or patient symptomatic: IDC insertion
  • Document volume drained, colour, character of urine
  • Review epidural — reduce rate if possible
  • If haematuria: flush 3-way catheter, alert urology

DVT Assessment

Post-operative DVT Signs Calf pain, unilateral leg swelling, warmth, erythema. Homan's sign (pain on dorsiflexion) is unreliable — positive in only 50% of DVTs. Use Wells Score. If Wells ≥2: arrange Doppler USS urgently. If PE suspected: CTPA urgently. Treat with therapeutic LMWH while awaiting imaging.

🩸 Peri-operative Diabetic Management

GCC ContextDiabetes prevalence is extremely high in the Gulf region (20–25% in some GCC states). Expect frequent post-operative hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia management on surgical wards.

Blood Glucose Targets

PhaseBGL Target
Pre-operative (Type 1)6–10 mmol/L
Pre-operative (Type 2)6–12 mmol/L
Intra/post-operative6–10 mmol/L
ICU post-op6–8 mmol/L (strict)

Hypoglycaemia Protocol (BGL <4 mmol/L)

  • If conscious: 15g oral glucose (juice/glucose gel)
  • If NBM/unconscious: 100mL 10% dextrose IV or 1mg glucagon IM
  • Recheck BGL in 15 minutes
  • Document and review insulin sliding scale
  • Alert surgical team if recurrent

Insulin Sliding Scale Monitoring

  • Blood glucose monitoring hourly in PACU, then 4-hourly on ward
  • Variable rate insulin infusion (VRII) for Type 1 DM and uncontrolled Type 2
  • Dextrose 5% or 10% infusion running alongside insulin
  • Never stop dextrose without reviewing insulin
  • Check potassium: insulin drives K+ into cells — monitor for hypokalaemia
⚠️

SGLT2 Inhibitor Warning

Euglycaemic DKA can occur post-surgery in patients on SGLT2 inhibitors (empagliflozin, dapagliflozin). Check urine/blood ketones if unwell even with normal blood glucose. Stop SGLT2 inhibitors 3 days pre-op.

Wound & Drain Management

🔬 Surgical Wound Assessment — REEDA Scale

Component0 (Normal)1 (Mild)2 (Moderate)3 (Severe)
RednessNoneWithin 0.25cm of incision0.25–0.5cm from incision>0.5cm from incision
EdemaNone<1cm from incision1–2cm from incision>2cm from incision
EcchymosisNoneWithin 0.25cm bilateral0.25–1cm bilateral or unilateral>1cm bilateral or unilateral
DischargeNoneSerum onlySerosanguineousBloody / purulent
ApproximationClosedSeparated <3mmSeparated 3–6mmSeparated >6mm
Scoring Interpretation0 = perfect healing. Score ≥3 = significant concern — document, photograph if facility available, escalate to medical team. Track trend over consecutive dressing changes.

Dressing Change Protocol

  • First dressing change: 24–48 hours post-operatively (wound sealing occurs at 24hr)
  • Aseptic non-touch technique (ANTT) — strict sterile field
  • Cleanse with 0.9% normal saline or chlorhexidine per protocol
  • Dry dressings for healing wounds; moisture-retentive for slow-healing wounds
  • Document: REEDA score, wound dimensions, exudate character
  • Photograph wounds weekly (with patient consent)
  • Do NOT remove adherent dry eschar without surgical team guidance
  • Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT/VAC) for complex wounds — change every 2–3 days
  • Antimicrobial dressings (silver-containing) for infected wounds
  • Teach patients wound care prior to discharge — demonstration + return demonstration
  • Document patient education in nursing notes

🩹 Surgical Drain Management

Types of Surgical Drains

Closed Suction Drains Jackson-Pratt (JP) / Redivac / Blake drain. Connected to sealed reservoir under negative pressure. Compress reservoir to maintain suction. Measure output every 4–8hr. Empty when ½ full. Keep below wound level. Strip tubing if clot present (per protocol). Common in: abdominal, breast, orthopaedic surgery.
Open Drains Corrugated drain / Penrose drain. Allows passive drainage by gravity/capillary action. Change overlying dressing frequently (soaks quickly). Assess for skin maceration. Common in: superficial wounds, infected cavities.
Active Drains (Sump) Requires suction attachment. Used for high-output cavities (abscesses, bile leaks). Monitor output closely — sudden reduction may indicate blockage not resolution.

Drain Output Documentation

  • Document: date, time, volume, character (serous, serosanguineous, bloody, bilious, turbid)
  • Normal day 1: moderate serosanguineous drainage acceptable
  • Fresh red blood: immediate surgical review
  • Turbid / bile-stained: anastomotic leak concern
  • Milky white: chyle leak (lymph) — alert surgical team

Drain Removal Criteria

Closed Suction Drain — Remove When: Output <30 mL per 24 hours. No signs of leak or infection. Usually Day 3–5 post abdominal surgery. Earlier for orthopaedic/breast (Day 1–3 if <30mL). Surgeons may leave longer if concern about anastomotic leak.

Drain Removal Technique

  • Explain procedure to patient
  • Analgesia 30 min prior (PRN opioid or paracetamol)
  • Remove securing suture with stitch cutter
  • Patient exhales or performs Valsalva (abdominal drains)
  • Withdraw in one smooth motion
  • Apply pressure dressing to drain site
  • Document volume, character of final output

🔴 Stoma Formation — Immediate Post-operative Assessment

GCC ContextStoma formation increasing with bowel cancer, IBD surgery, and colostomy following trauma. Many patients require extended stoma education — language barrier common in GCC. Use stoma nurse specialist early.

Immediate Post-op Stoma Assessment

FeatureExpected (Normal)Concern
ColourPink to red (beefy red)Dark purple/black = ischaemia
OedemaModerate swelling expected D0–5Marked peri-stomal oedema
OutputColostomy: minimal D0–2. Ileostomy: 500–1000mL/day from D2High output >2000mL/day ileostomy
AdhesionMucocutaneous junction intactSeparation at skin junction
RetractionSpout should protrude 2–3cmRetraction below skin level

Stoma Care Protocol

  • Apply correct size appliance — measure stoma at each change (reduces oedema for 6–8 weeks)
  • Protect peri-stomal skin — barrier cream/ring
  • Ileostomy: empty bag when ⅓–½ full to avoid weight separation
  • Colostomy: change every 2–4 days or when detaching
  • Dark stoma/ischaemia: emergency surgeon review — possible stoma revision required
🚨

Stoma Ischaemia — Emergency

Dark purple/black stoma: compromised blood supply. Do NOT pack or apply pressure. Urgent surgical review. May require return to theatre.

🦠 Surgical Site Infection (SSI)

Superficial SSI (<30 days) Involves skin and subcutaneous tissue only. Signs: redness, warmth, pain, purulent discharge from incision. No fever or systemic upset usually. Management: wound swab, open wound (remove sutures), daily dressing, oral antibiotics per culture.
Deep Incisional SSI (30–90 days) Involves deep soft tissue (fascia, muscle). Signs: purulent drainage from deep wound, spontaneous dehiscence, deep abscess. Fever, systemic symptoms common. Management: wound swab + blood cultures, IV antibiotics, surgical debridement/washout often required.
Organ/Space SSI (30–90 days) Involves any organ or space opened during surgery (e.g., intra-abdominal abscess, anastomotic leak, liver abscess). Requires CT scanning for diagnosis. Management: IV antibiotics, CT-guided drainage or re-operation.

SSI Nursing Management

  • Perform wound swab before starting antibiotics where possible
  • Blood cultures ×2 sets if temperature >38.5°C or patient systemically unwell
  • Strict hand hygiene and ANTT for all wound care
  • Isolate patient if MRSA confirmed — contact precautions
  • Document wound assessment with REEDA scale at each dressing change
  • Notify infection control team if cluster of SSIs identified

Wound Dehiscence

⚠️

Wound Dehiscence Management

  • Cover wound with sterile saline-moistened gauze immediately
  • Make patient nil by mouth — possible return to theatre
  • Urgent surgical team review
  • Record vital signs — assess for sepsis
  • Do NOT attempt to close or re-approximate edges
🚨

Evisceration — SURGICAL EMERGENCY

Bowel/organ protruding from wound:

  • Call for immediate help — do not leave patient
  • Cover bowel with large sterile saline-moistened drape (NOT dry gauze)
  • Keep bowel moist — re-moisten every 10–15 minutes
  • Nil by mouth immediately
  • IV access — IV fluids running
  • Lie patient flat or semi-recumbent — do not allow sitting up
  • Urgent surgical review — IMMEDIATE return to theatre required
  • Document time, events, vital signs, and actions taken

Post-operative Complications

🩸 Post-operative Haemorrhage

Primary Haemorrhage (0–6 hours) Occurs during or immediately after surgery. Usually from inadequate haemostasis or ligature failure. Signs: fresh blood from wound/drain, falling BP, rising HR, pallor, restlessness. Management: direct pressure, IV access ×2 large bore, IV fluids, urgent surgical review, likely return to theatre.
Reactionary Haemorrhage (6–24 hours) Caused by clot displacement due to rising BP as anaesthetic wears off, or patient movement. Same signs as primary. Management: as above — escalate urgently. Group and save, cross-match blood.
Secondary Haemorrhage (7–14 days) Caused by wound infection eroding vessel walls. Presents as sudden fresh bleed from wound or drain, often with fever/sepsis signs. Management: wound swab, blood cultures, IV antibiotics, surgical review. May require vessel ligation/embolisation.
🚨

Haemorrhage Escalation Thresholds

Escalate IMMEDIATELY if: SBP <90 mmHg with tachycardia >100, drain output >200mL/hr ×2 consecutive hours, falling Hb on repeat bloods, signs of haemodynamic compromise. Activate major haemorrhage protocol if applicable.

⚠️ Anastomotic Leak

Timing: typically Day 3–7 post bowel anastomosis surgeryAnastomotic leak is one of the most serious post-operative complications — mortality can reach 20–30% if delayed. Early recognition by ward nurses is critical.

Subtle Early Signs (Day 3–5)

  • Persistent or rising CRP — CRP >150 on Day 3 or continuing to rise is most sensitive marker
  • Unexplained tachycardia (HR >100) — early warning sign
  • Low-grade fever (38–38.5°C)
  • Prolonged ileus beyond expected
  • Patient "not feeling right" — take subjective complaints seriously

Overt Signs

  • High fever (>38.5°C)
  • Peritonism: guarding, rigidity, rebound tenderness
  • Faeculent or turbid drain output
  • Drain output change from serous to turbid/brown
  • Haemodynamic instability: septic shock pattern

Investigations

  • Urgent bloods: FBC, CRP, U&E, LFTs, blood cultures ×2
  • CT abdomen and pelvis WITH IV contrast — modality of choice
  • Water-soluble contrast enema if CT equivocal

Nursing Actions

  • Make patient nil by mouth immediately
  • IV access ×2 large bore — IV fluid resuscitation
  • Urinary catheter — hourly urine output monitoring
  • Escalate to senior nurse and surgical registrar immediately
  • Do not administer further oral medications until reviewed
  • Prepare for possible return to theatre

🔵 Post-operative Ileus vs Bowel Obstruction

FeaturePost-op IleusMechanical Obstruction
Bowel soundsAbsent or very quietTinkling / high-pitched / hyperactive early
OnsetImmediately post-op (Day 0–5)Usually Day 3+ or later
DistensionUniform, generalisedLocalised or asymmetric
PainDull, generalised discomfortColicky, intermittent
VomitingCommon, biliousProfuse, faeculent in late obstruction
X-ray findingsGas throughout small and large bowelDistended loops with air-fluid levels, cut-off point
ManagementNBM, IV fluids, prokinetics (metoclopramide), early mobilisation, chewing gum ERASNG tube decompression, IV fluids, surgical review — may need operative intervention

🫁 Pulmonary Complications

Atelectasis (Most Common)

Most common post-op pulmonary complication

Collapse of alveoli due to retained secretions, shallow breathing, splinting from pain. Occurs in 24–72hr post major surgery.

  • Deep breathing exercises every hour
  • Incentive spirometry 10 reps hourly
  • Effective coughing with wound splinting
  • Adequate analgesia — pain prevents breathing
  • Early mobilisation — sitting up improves lung volumes
  • Chest physiotherapy if not resolving

Post-operative Pneumonia

  • Usually Day 3–5 post major surgery
  • Signs: fever, productive cough, purulent sputum, hypoxia (SpO2 <94%), consolidation on CXR
  • Risk factors: prolonged ventilation, aspiration, immunosuppression, COPD
  • Management: sputum culture, IV antibiotics per local protocol, physiotherapy, O2 therapy
  • Prevention: ventilator care bundles (if ventilated), head of bed 30–45°, oral hygiene

Pulmonary Embolism (PE)

Clinical Signs Sudden dyspnoea, pleuritic chest pain, haemoptysis, tachycardia, hypoxia, hypotension (massive PE). ECG: sinus tachycardia, S1Q3T3 pattern.

PE Management

  • O2 — high flow (15L NRB) immediately
  • IV access, urgent bloods: ABG, D-dimer, troponin, BNP
  • ECG, CXR (to exclude other diagnoses)
  • CTPA — definitive diagnosis
  • Therapeutic anticoagulation: LMWH or IV heparin
  • Massive PE with haemodynamic compromise: thrombolysis consideration

🧠 Post-operative Delirium — THINK Framework

High Risk in GCC Surgical WardsElderly patients, post-cardiac surgery, post-major abdominal surgery. Common and often unrecognised. Use CAM (Confusion Assessment Method) screening tool.
T — Toxic (drugs, opioids, anticholinergics) H — Hypoxia I — Infection / Intracranial N — Non-pharmacological K — K+ (electrolytes)

Assessment

  • CAM positive: acute onset + fluctuating + inattention + disorganised thinking/altered consciousness
  • Check vital signs: SpO2, temperature, blood glucose, BP
  • Urgent bloods: FBC, U&E (Na, K, Mg), LFTs, TFTs, blood cultures if febrile
  • Review medication chart — opioids, anticholinergics, benzodiazepines, steroids
  • ECG (AF can precipitate delirium)
  • Urinalysis — UTI common precipitant

Non-pharmacological Management (First Line)

  • Reorientate calmly and repeatedly — avoid arguing with patient
  • Familiar faces: family at bedside (encouraged in GCC)
  • Ensure hearing aids and glasses are in place
  • Maintain day/night cycle: lights on by day, dim at night
  • Minimise unnecessary cannulas, catheters, restraints
  • Early mobilisation
  • Haloperidol 0.5–1mg oral/IM if safety risk (last resort — document consent)

📉 Post-operative Hypotension (SBP <90 mmHg)

CauseKey FeaturesInitial Management
HaemorrhageTachycardia, pale, cold, drains activeIV fluids, blood products, surgical review
Epidural effectWarm peripheries, bradycardia, high blockIV fluid bolus, reduce epidural rate, leg elevation, ephedrine if not resolving
Septic shockFever, warm flushed skin initially, rising WCC, source of infectionIV fluids 30mL/kg, blood cultures, IV antibiotics within 1hr, ICU review
Cardiac (MI, failure)Chest pain, ECG changes, raised troponin, pulmonary oedemaECG, troponin, cardiology review, avoid fluid overload
AnaphylaxisUrticaria, bronchospasm, angioedema, temporal relation to new drug/transfusionAdrenaline 0.5mg IM, IV fluids, antihistamines, corticosteroids, stop trigger
Pulmonary embolismSudden dyspnoea, tachycardia, hypoxia, no obvious bleedingO2, IV access, CTPA, therapeutic anticoagulation

Discharge Planning

🏠 Discharge Criteria

ERAS Discharge — Criteria-Based (Not Day-Based)In ERAS protocols, discharge is determined by meeting specific criteria, not a fixed length of stay. This enables safe early discharge while maintaining quality outcomes.

Clinical Discharge Criteria

  • MEWS <3 on 2 consecutive observations
  • Tolerating oral intake (fluids ± diet as appropriate for procedure)
  • Pain controlled on oral analgesia (NRS ≤3/10 at rest)
  • Mobile and independent (or to pre-op level with support)
  • Wound dry and intact — no acute signs of infection
  • Urine output adequate — catheter removed if inserted
  • Bowel function returning — flatus or bowel movement (if bowel procedure)
  • Patient/carer understands discharge instructions

Suture/Staple Removal Timing

SiteRemoval Timing
Face / scalp5–7 days
Neck5–7 days
Chest / upper back7–10 days
Abdomen10–14 days
Lower extremity10–14 days
Joints (knee, elbow)14 days
Diabetic / immunosuppressedAdd 2–4 extra days
Dissolvable Sutures Vicryl/Dexon absorb in 3–8 weeks (deep layers). Monocryl absorbs in 3–4 months (subcuticular). These do NOT require removal — inform patients if they feel/see suture material.

📄 Discharge Letter Content (JCI Standard)

Mandatory Discharge Letter Components

  • Patient details: full name, DOB, MRN, date of admission and discharge
  • Diagnosis: primary diagnosis and any secondary diagnoses identified
  • Procedure performed: full surgical procedure name, date, surgeon
  • Hospital course summary: significant events, complications, treatments
  • Current clinical status: condition at discharge
  • Discharge medications: full list with doses, frequency, duration, route
  • Allergies: prominently listed
  • Follow-up: date, clinic, surgeon name, what will be reviewed
  • Wound care instructions: dressing type, change schedule, suture/staple removal date
  • Red flag symptoms: when to return to Emergency Department immediately

Red Flag Symptoms — Teach Every Patient

🚨

Return to ED Immediately If:

  • Temperature >38.5°C or <36°C
  • Increasing wound redness, swelling, or pus from wound
  • Fresh bleeding that does not stop
  • Severe or worsening abdominal pain
  • Nausea/vomiting — unable to keep anything down
  • Difficulty breathing or chest pain
  • Calf pain, unilateral leg swelling (DVT)
  • Urine not passing or blood in urine
  • Confusion or severe drowsiness
  • Wound edges separating / opening

💊 Discharge Medications

Analgesia

  • Regular paracetamol 1g QID × 5–7 days
  • NSAID (ibuprofen/diclofenac) if no contraindications × 5 days
  • Weak opioid (codeine/tramadol) PRN — max 3–5 days
  • Counsel on opioid: do not drive, no alcohol, constipation side effect

Anticoagulants

  • LMWH injection: major pelvic/orthopaedic/cancer surgery — up to 28 days
  • DOAC: as per thromboprophylaxis guideline
  • Teach self-injection technique before discharge
  • Return to prior anticoagulant when safe (per surgeon)

Laxatives

If on Opioids at DischargePrescribe lactulose 10mL BD + senna 2 tabs nocte. Opioid-induced constipation is universal — prevents post-discharge readmission for constipation/ileus.

Antibiotics

  • Complete course if SSI confirmed — typically 5–7 days oral
  • Do not prescribe prophylactic antibiotics without indication
  • Document allergy profile — use alternative if penicillin allergy

GCC-Specific: Travel-Safe Discharge

Inter-Emirate / International Travel Many GCC surgical patients travel from other emirates or countries (medical tourism). Ensure: adequate medication supply for journey, written summary for treating physician at home, medical clearance for flying if within 10–14 days of surgery (especially DVT risk with long-haul flights), emergency contact number provided.

📚 Discharge Patient Education

Activity Restrictions

Surgery TypeDrivingLight ActivitiesExerciseHeavy Lifting
Laparoscopic (minor)1–2 weeksImmediately2–4 weeks6 weeks
Open abdominal4–6 weeks2 weeks6 weeks8–12 weeks
Orthopaedic (joint)Per physiotherapistImmediate (assisted)6–12 weeksPer surgeon
Cosmetic/plastic1–2 weeks48hr6 weeks6 weeks

Diet Instructions

  • Bowel surgery: low-fibre initially (white rice, pasta, bread), avoiding nuts, seeds, skins × 4–6 weeks
  • Upper GI surgery: small frequent meals, avoid lying down after eating, nutritional supplements may be required
  • General surgery: normal diet as tolerated — protein-rich foods aid wound healing
  • Bariatric surgery: liquid → purée → soft diet → normal (months); vitamin supplementation essential

GCC Family Involvement

Discharge Education with Family In GCC culture, family plays a central role in patient care. Include key family member in discharge education — teach wound care, medication schedule, and red flag symptoms. Document who was educated. However, respect patient autonomy — confirm patient's own wishes regarding information sharing.

Surgical Ward Nursing Quiz

Test your knowledge of surgical ward nursing principles. Select the best answer for each question.

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Questions Correct

🌍 GCC-Specific Surgical Nursing Context

Surgical Volume & Elective Tourism

  • GCC private hospitals manage extremely high elective surgical volumes — cosmetic, orthopaedic, bariatric, and ophthalmology most common
  • Medical tourism is significant — UAE, Saudi, Qatar attract international patients for complex procedures
  • Cosmetic surgery (rhinoplasty, abdominoplasty, breast augmentation) constitutes a large proportion of private hospital caseload
  • Bariatric surgery rates among highest in world — metabolic syndrome driven by dietary patterns and sedentary lifestyle

Ramadan Surgical Scheduling

Ramadan Challenges Elective surgery often reduced in Ramadan as patients prefer to fast. Emergency surgery proceeds regardless. For elective cases during Ramadan: Islamic scholar consultation confirms IV medications/injections are permissible. Carbohydrate loading pre-op may be refused — ensure IV dextrose orders in place. Hydration status carefully monitored. Patient may refuse oral medications during daylight — arrange for iftar time administration if possible.

Private Hospital Culture & Patient Safety

Rapid-Throughput Pressure GCC private hospitals often face pressure for rapid bed turnover. Nurses must document discharge criteria clearly and not discharge patients who do not meet clinical criteria. NEVER discharge against clinical judgement due to bed pressure alone — escalate to charge nurse/medical officer. Document any pressure to discharge early from non-clinical sources.
ERAS in JCI Hospitals JCI-accredited hospitals (majority of large GCC private hospitals) require ERAS pathway documentation, daily goal compliance tracking, and variance reporting when ERAS milestones are not met.