Skip to main content

Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) programs promote an evidence-based, multidisciplinary approach to patient care aimed at facilitating faster recovery from surgery, decreasing hospital length of stay, and minimizing post-operative complications. From scheduling through discharge, all phases of perioperative care are incorporated into ERAS programs.  

ERAS Pathway:

Additional tools associated with this Clinical/ERAS Pathway: 

Inclusion and exclusion criteria:

  • Inclusion: 
    • Patients undergoing Ganz periacetabular osteotomy or surgical hip dislocation
  • Exclusion: 
    • Closed pelvic procedures 

Committee members involved in the development:

  • Caleb Grote, MD, PhD | Orthopaedic Surgery | Committee Co-Chair 
  • Emily Weisberg, MD, FASA | Anesthesiology | Committee Co-Chair 
  • Nichole Doyle, MD | Anesthesiology | Committee Member 
  • Christian Taylor, MD | Anesthesiology | Committee Member 
  • Colleen Moreland, DO |Orthopaedic Surgery | Committee Member  
  • Jennifer Foster, BSN, RN | Operating Room | Committee Member 
  • Anne Stuedemann, MSN, RN, CPNP | Orthopaedic Surgery | Committee Member 
  • Janet O’Rear, BSN, RN, CPN | Orthopaedic Surgery | Committee Member 
  • Sylvonna Singleton, MSN, RN, FNP-BC, RNFA | Orthopaedic Surgery | Committee Member 
  • Heather Sambol, RN, APRN | Anesthesiology | Committee Member 

EBP Committee Members: 

  • Todd Glenski, MD, MSHA, FASA | Anesthesiology, Evidence Based Practice 
  • Andrea Melanson, OTD, OTR/L | Evidence Based Practice 

Publication dates: 

  • Finalized date: June 2024 
  • Next expected revision date: June 2027 

Concerns with content: 

If you have any questions regarding this content or identify a broken link, please email evidencebasedpractice@cmh.edu.  

These pathways do not establish a standard of care to be followed in every case. It is recognized that each case is different, and those individuals involved in providing health care are expected to use their judgment in determining what is in the best interests of the patient based on the circumstances existing at the time. It is impossible to anticipate all possible situations that may exist and to prepare a pathway for each. Accordingly, these pathways should guide care with the understanding that departures from them may be required at times.