Abstract

IntroductionRemoving unnecessary instruments from surgical trays used in the operating room conserves resources and time. We aimed to assess the cost savings impact of breast surgical tray instrument reduction. MethodsBreast surgeons at a single institution reviewed the standard surgical tray used for lumpectomies and mastectomies and removed underutilized instruments to create a breast-specific tray. This tray was used for all breast surgeries performed throughout the 2019 calendar year. Data for breast-specific tray usage, instrument reprocessing costs, and instrument maintenance costs for inspection, sharpening, aligning, and lubricating were retrospectively obtained. ResultsThe breast-specific tray was reduced from 82 to 65 instruments. The cost of reprocessing each instrument is $1.69. After 30 tray sterilizations, each tray was sent for maintenance at a cost of $2.00 per instrument. With 10 breast-specific trays in circulation, the trays were used a total of 656 times during the calendar year. Each tray was sent for maintenance an average of two times during this time period. Thus, instrument reduction resulted in $18,847 in instrument reprocessing and $680.00 in maintenance savings, with total annual cost savings of $19,527. ConclusionsOptimizing surgical trays by removing unused instruments yields significant cost savings and contributes to improved efficiency in the sterile processing department. As efforts to eliminate wasteful practices and reduce costs within the health care system continue, opportunities remain for standardization of trays across all surgical departments and institutions.

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