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. 2012 May;151(5):660-6.
doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2011.12.005. Epub 2012 Jan 11.

Novel use of electronic whiteboard in the operating room increases surgical team compliance with pre-incision safety practices

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Novel use of electronic whiteboard in the operating room increases surgical team compliance with pre-incision safety practices

Rajshri Mainthia et al. Surgery. 2012 May.

Abstract

Background: Despite evidence that use of a checklist during the pre-incision time out improves patient morbidity and mortality, compliance with performing the required elements of the checklist has been low. In an effort to improve compliance, a standardized time out interactive Electronic Checklist System [iECS] was implemented in all hospital operating room (OR) suites at 1 institution. The purpose of this 12-month prospective observational study was to assess whether an iECS in the OR improves and sustains improved surgical team compliance with the pre-incision time out.

Methods: Direct observational analyses of preprocedural time outs were performed on 80 cases 1 month before, and 1 and 9 months after implementation of the iECS, for a total of 240 observed cases. Three observers, who achieved high interrater reliability (kappa = 0.83), recorded a compliance score (yes, 1; no, 0) on each element of the time out. An element was scored as compliant if it was clearly verbalized by the surgical team.

Results: Pre-intervention observations indicated that surgical staff verbally communicated the core elements of the time out procedure 49.7 ± 12.9% of the time. After implementation of the iECS, direct observation of 80 surgical cases at 1 and 9 months indicated that surgical staff verbally communicated the core elements of the time out procedure 81.6 ± 11.4% and 85.8 ± 6.8% of the time, respectively, resulting in a statistically significant (P < .0001) increase in time out procedural compliance.

Conclusion: Implementation of a standardized, iECS can dramatically increase compliance with preprocedural time outs in the OR, an important and necessary step in improving patient outcomes and reducing preventable complications and deaths.

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