Abstract

BackgroundInter-professional teamwork in the operating room is important for patient safety. The World Health Organization (WHO) checklist was introduced to improve intraoperative teamwork. The aim of this study was to evaluate the safety climate in a Swedish operating room setting before and after an intervention, using a revised version of the WHO checklist to improve teamwork.MethodsThis study is a single center prospective interventional study. Participants were personnel working in operating room teams including surgeons, anesthesiologists, scrub nurses, nurse anaesthetists and nurse assistants. The study started with pre-interventional observations of the WHO checklist use followed by education on safety climate, the WHO checklist, and non-technical skills in the operating room. Thereafter a revised version of the WHO checklist was introduced. Post-interventional observations regarding the performance of the WHO checklist were carried out. The Safety Attitude Questionnaire was used to assess safety climate at baseline and post-intervention.ResultsAt baseline we discovered a need for improved teamwork and communication. The participants considered teamwork to be important for patient safety, but had different perceptions of good teamwork between professions. The intervention, a revised version of the WHO checklist, did not affect teamwork climate. Adherence to the revision of the checklist was insufficient, dominated by a lack of structure.ConclusionsThere was no significant change in teamwork climate by use of the revised WHO checklist, which may be due to insufficient implementation, as a lack of adherence to the WHO checklist was detected. We found deficiencies in teamwork and communication. Further studies exploring how to improve safety climate are needed.Trial registrationNCT02329691.

Highlights

  • Inter-professional teamwork in the operating room is important for patient safety

  • Baseline Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ) The operating rooms studied had a staff of 150 persons, including surgeons, anesthesiologists, scrub nurses, nurse anaesthetists and nurse assistants (Fig. 2), of whom 121 (81%) answered the baseline questionnaire

  • Surgeons and anesthesiologists scored significantly higher than nurses regarding ‘Teamwork climate’ (72.2 SD 10 vs 62.2 SD 16.2 p = 0.001) for details see Table 2

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Summary

Introduction

The World Health Organization (WHO) checklist was introduced to improve intraoperative teamwork. The aim of this study was to evaluate the safety climate in a Swedish operating room setting before and after an intervention, using a revised version of the WHO checklist to improve teamwork. Erestam et al Patient Safety in Surgery (2017) 11:4 a shared understanding of the team task and knowledge about who is responsible for what. This allows the team to anticipate one another’s needs so that they can work as an effective team and make successful decisions. In 2007 the World Health Organization (WHO) study group ‘Safe surgery saves lives’ created a checklist: the WHO Surgical Safety Checklist with the purpose to improve intraoperative team communication and consistency of care. Insufficient use of and/or missing items in the WHO checklist may provide a false sense of security for the operating team [6]

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