Abstract

Introduction The World Health Organization (WHO) introduced the surgical safety checklist (SSC) to reduce postoperative morbidity and mortality; however, its use in low- and middle-income countries is still low. Methods We conducted a survey from January 2 to 22, 2024, in public hospitals’ pediatric surgery departments and units in Senegal to assess the use of the WHO SSC or an adapted version. Results The participation rate was 100% (23 hospitals), with 11 second-level hospitals (47.8%) and 10 (43.5%) having at least two pediatric surgeons. All hospitals had an anesthetist nurse, and 18 hospitals (78.3%) had at least two scrub nurses. For the surgical workload, 14 hospitals (60.9%) had five to 10 surgical interventions weekly. Eleven hospitals (47.8%) had training on use of the SSC, and 8 of the 23 hospitals (34.8%) used the SSC. The WHO SSC nonutilization was mainly due to a lack of training in nine hospitals (60%) and SSC unavailability in five hospitals (33.3%). Members of 22 hospitals (95.6%) were available for training on use of the SSC. Conclusion The WHO SSC is poorly used in pediatric operating rooms of public hospitals in Senegal. The main reasons for nonutilization are remediable.

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