Table of Contents
Neurosurgery On-Call Protocol
✅ 1. Standardized On-Call Report Structure
🧠 2. Supervision and Responsibility
⚙️ 3. Technical and Logistic Readiness
📊 4. Monthly Quality Review
Neurosurgery On-Call Protocol
✅ 1. Standardized On-Call Report Structure
Every daily on-call report must include:
SURGERIES
Patient ID / Age / Referring site
Diagnosis
Procedure performed
: technique, laterality, complications
Immediate postoperative status
: GCS, imaging, drains, destination unit
ADMISSIONS
Reason for admission and working diagnosis
Neurological exam and baseline status
Imaging findings
Clear clinical plan
: observation, scheduled surgery, pending decisions
NOT ADMITTED / REDIRECTED
Precise clinical justification
Destination service and accepting physician
(name, department)
ICU / CRITICAL PATIENTS
Relevant acute events
(e.g. mydriasis, ICP spikes, coma)
Action taken
: medical/surgical response
Follow-up plan
: re-evaluation, imaging, surgical reconsideration
🧠 2. Supervision and Responsibility
The
on-call neurosurgeon
must endorse all surgical and critical decisions.
ICU and comatose patients
must be formally re-evaluated by neurosurgery daily.
The
on-call coordinator or senior consultant
reviews all reports within 48 hours.
⚙️ 3. Technical and Logistic Readiness
Daily verification of essential devices
: valve programmers, external drains, shunts.
Checklist for surgical readiness
: OR availability, drains, emergency CT access.
Formal inter-hospital communication protocols
with nearby centers (e.g. Elche, Orihuela).
📊 4. Monthly Quality Review
Monthly audit of on-call reports by the head of department.
Identification of recurring issues: vague reports, unclear plans, protocol breaches.
Summary report sent to the medical director with key indicators:
Number of surgeries
Avoidable admissions
Incidents or adverse events