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OM in the News: Hospital Checklists and TQM

“Surgery checklists save lives,” reports The Washington Post (April 18, 2017). Hospitals in South Carolina that completed a statewide program to implement the WHO’s Surgical Safety Checklist had a 22% reduction in post-surgical deaths. The study, to appear in the August 2017 issue of Annals of Surgery, is one of the first to show a large-scale impact of the checklist on the general population.

Surgical care requires careful coordination of a variety of skilled health-care providers in a complex infrastructure using specialized tools. “Safety checklists are not a piece of paper that somehow magically protect patients, but rather they are a tool to help change practice, to foster a specific type of behavior in communication, to change implicit communication to explicit in order to create a culture where speaking up is permitted and encouraged and to create an environment where information is shared between all members of the team,” said the Harvard Medical School prof directing the study.

A total of 14 hospitals completed the program, representing 40% of the total inpatient surgery population in the state. Researchers compared the 30-day post-surgery mortality results between the checklist hospitals with those of the rest of the hospitals in the state. The report includes major inpatient surgical procedures from various specialties, such as neurological, cardiac and orthopedic surgery.

The 19-item checklist encourages surgical teams to discuss the surgical plan, risks and concerns. Most of the items are simple, such as “does the patient have a known allergy” or “is essential imaging displayed.” Following surgery, patients are at risk of complications and death from a variety of causes, such as infection and organ failure. The checklist ends with a requirement for a conversation among the surgeon, anesthetist and nurse about the patient’s recovery and management plan. As a whole, the checklist items create an operating room communication culture that improves overall surgical care and safety before, during and after an operation.

Classroom discussion questions:

  1. What other tools described in Chapter 6 could be used in operating rooms to improve quality?
  2. Why are checklists so valuable? What other industries use them regularly?

 

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