Abstract

In the main operating rooms of a large academic hospital there was a report of 408 count discrepancies in 2015-2016 and 13 incidences of retained surgical items (RSIs). There was a lack of a consistent and standardized surgical count process among nurses. To reduce count discrepancies by 25%, prevent RSIs, and improve the compliance of the perioperative nursing team regarding the surgical count process. An evidence-based quality improvement project with a sample of 455 surgical procedures and 118 nurses. Data collection occurred over an eight-week period in 2018 using a Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) methodology to study the effectiveness of the utilization of the Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN) practice guidelines for the prevention of RSIs. The inclusion of risk reduction strategies such as the utilization of an AORN guideline whiteboard to record surgical items and the identification of high-risk items for retained device fragments or high-risk surgical items for RSIs resulted in the reduction of incorrect surgical counts by 71.43%, with no incidence of RSIs. Further, nurse compliance on surgical count practices improved significantly, F (5, 46) = 2.47, p = .046, PES = .21. The implementation of the AORN guidelines for perioperative surgical count practices by the perioperative nursing team provided an improved surgical count process. A system approach to performance improvement is needed to prevent RSIs.

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