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. 2007 Sep;246(3):395-403, discussion 403-5.
doi: 10.1097/SLA.0b013e3181469987.

Getting surgery right

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Getting surgery right

John R Clarke et al. Ann Surg. 2007 Sep.

Abstract

Objective: We sought to identify factors contributing to wrong-site surgery (wrong patient, procedure, side, or part).

Methods: We examined all reports from all hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers--in a state that requires reporting of wrong-site surgery--from the initiation of the reporting requirement in June 2004 through December 2006.

Results: Over 30 months, there were 427 reports of near misses (253) or surgical interventions started (174) involving the wrong patient (34), wrong procedure (39), wrong side (298), and/or wrong part (60); 83 patients had incorrect procedures done to completion. Procedures on the lower extremities were the most common (30%). Common contributions to errors resulting in the initiation of wrong-site surgery involved patient positioning (20) and anesthesia interventions (29) before any planned time-out process, not verifying consents (22) or site markings (16), and not doing a proper time-out process (17). Actions involving operating surgeons contributed to 92. Common sources of successful recovery to prevent wrong-site surgery were patients (57), circulating nurses (30), and verifying consents (43). Interestingly, 31 formal time-out processes were unsuccessful in preventing "wrong" surgery.

Conclusions: Wrong-site surgery continues to occur regularly, especially wrong-side surgery, even with formal site verification. Many errors occur before the time-out; some persist despite the verification protocol. Patients and nurses are the surgeons' best allies. Verification, starting with verification of the consent, needs to occur at multiple points before the incision.

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References

    1. National Quality Forum. Serious Reportable Events in Healthcare: A Consensus Report. Washington: National Quality Forum; 2002.
    1. Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel Broward Metro Edition. Preventing Surgical Mistakes: State Licensing Board Opts for a System of Checks Over an increase in Penalties. Fort Lauderdale: Sun-Sentinel; July 29, 2006.
    1. Associated Press. Big payout in wrong knee surgery lawsuit. Choreographer awarded $450,000 from hospital, doctor. [MSNBC Web site]. January 21, 2005. Available at: www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6852479/. Accessed April 24, 2007.
    1. Baldwin C. Jury awards $1.2 M in lawsuit. [Casper Star Tribune Web site]. May 13, 2005. Available at: www.casperstartribune.net/articles/2005/05/13/news/b30aab17c9f31d3987257.... Accessed April 24, 2007.
    1. Kwaan MR, Studdert DM, Zinner MJ, et al. Incidence, patterns, and prevention of wrong-site surgery. Arch Surg. 2006;141:353–357. - PubMed

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