Smoking Cessation Shortly Before Surgery Not Tied to Lowered Risk of Complications

A meta-analysis of nine previous studies found that quitting smoking shortly before surgery was not associated with an increased risk of postoperative complications, according to a study published in Archives of Internal Medicine.

Advertisement

Researchers analyzed existing studies through a search of the medical literature. They found nine studies that met their inclusion criteria comparing post-operative complications in patients who stopped smoking eight weeks or less prior to surgery with those who continued to smoke.

Only one study showed a benefit in quitting compared with continuing smoking, and none identified any detrimental outcomes. In meta-analyses, quitting smoking within eight weeks prior to surgery was not associated with an increase or decrease in overall postoperative complications.

Read the study about smoking cessation and surgery outcomes.

Read other coverage about outcomes:

CDC Awards $10M in Research Grants for Reducing Healthcare-Associated Infections

Pittsburgh Physician Put on Probation for Violating Infection Control Standards

70% Increase in Patients Needing Home Healthcare After Hospital Discharge

Advertisement

Next Up in ASC Accreditation, Licensure & Medicare Certification

  • From AI-driven revenue cycle strategy to payer negotiations, staffing strain and surgical workflow redesign, ASC leaders told Becker’s the biggest…

  • Lansing, Mich.-based UM Health-Sparrow plans to build a $60 million ASC.  The outpatient facility will include four operating rooms at…

  • Health systems are doubling down on their outpatient strategy, funneling more than $200 million into new ASCs and outpatient campuses…

Advertisement

Comments are closed.