Abstract
Abstract Introduction NICE emphasises the importance of pregnancy testing before surgical procedures as a patient safety precaution, especially in 13-16-year-olds. This is because, in the UK, a third of females will have been sexually active by the age of 16, meanwhile, in England there are 67,000 operations involving females aged 12-15 annually. Method Guidance from NICE and RCPCH was used to create standards to compare against current practice. Surgical admissions involving females aged 13-16 were retrospectively analysed over a one-year period and compared to these standards. Changes, including creation of a protocol, revision of the clerking proforma and staff education, were implemented to improve compliance and patient data was re-audited following this. Results Initially, 27% of patients did not have pregnancy testing before their procedure and consent for pregnancy testing was not documented. However, when pregnancy tests were performed, the result was documented 100% of the time. After implementing changes, 100% of patients had pregnancy testing before their procedure and documentation of consent had improved. Conclusions Initial practice showed poor compliance with NICE and RCPCH standards. Changes implemented have shown increased compliance to NICE and RCPCH standards and these changes could be used as a model to improve clinical compliance in further areas.
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