Abstract

BackgroundAlthough surgery is essential in healthcare, a significant number of patients suffer unfair harm while undergoing surgery. Many of these originate from failures in non-technical aspects, especially communication among operators. A surgical safety checklist is a simple tool that helps to reduce surgical adverse events, but even if it is fast to fill out, its compilation is often neglected by the healthcare workers because of unprepared cultural background. The present study aims to value the efficacy of a free intervention, such as a short training about risk management and safety checklist, to improve checklist adherence.MethodsIn March 2019, the medical and nursing staff of the General Surgical Unit attended a two-lesson theoretical training concerning surgical safety and risk management tools such as the surgical safety checklist. The authors compared the completeness of the surgical checklists after and before the training, considering the same period (2 months) for both groups.ResultThe surgical safety checklists were present in 198 cases (70.97%) before the intervention and 231 cases (96.25%) after that. After the training, the compilation adherence increased for every different type of healthcare worker of the unit (surgeons, nurses, anesthetists, and scrab nurses). Furthermore, a longer hospitalization was associated with a higher surgical checklist adherence by the operators.ConclusionsThe results showed that a free and simple intervention, such as a two-lesson training, significantly stimulated the correct use of the surgical safety checklist. Moreover, the checklist adherence increased even for the operators who did not attend the training, maybe because of the positive influence of the colleagues' positive behaviors. As the results were promising with only two theoretical lessons, much more can be done to build a new safety culture in healthcare.

Highlights

  • The operating room is a complex system that involves many professionals with different technical tasks

  • Many surgical adverse events originate from failures in non-technical aspects such as leadership, situation awareness, decision making, and especially communication and teamwork among operators [5, 6]

  • The present study aims to measure the impact of the twolessons training concerning risk management in healthcare

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Summary

Introduction

The operating room is a complex system that involves many professionals with different technical tasks. Surgery is an essential resource for health care, the resources invested in it are often inadequate [3] In such a context of limited funds, a surgical error causing serious harm to the patient poses a medical liability issue as well as an ethical one. Many surgical adverse events originate from failures in non-technical aspects such as leadership, situation awareness, decision making, and especially communication and teamwork among operators [5, 6]. Surgery is essential in healthcare, a significant number of patients suffer unfair harm while undergoing surgery. Many of these originate from failures in non-technical aspects, especially communication among operators. The present study aims to value the efficacy of a free intervention, such as a short training about risk management and safety checklist, to improve checklist adherence

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