240 likes | 333 Views
Can the use of “WHO Surgical safety checklist” Save lives? Gathering Evidence. Dr Khamis Elessi Head of EBM Unit- Faculty of Medicine, Islamic University-Gaza. WHO Surgical safety checklist. Background:
E N D
Can the use of “WHO Surgical safety checklist” Save lives? Gathering Evidence. Dr Khamis Elessi Head of EBM Unit- Faculty of Medicine, Islamic University-Gaza
WHO Surgical safety checklist • Background: • Published by WHO in 2009 & focuses on teamwork, communication, adherence to good practice, and anticipation of adverse events. • It aims to ensure that teams consistently follow few critical safety steps and thereby minimize the most common and avoidable risks endangering the lives and well-being of surgical patients worldwide.
WHO’s 10 Objectives for Safe Surgery • Team will operate on the correct patient at the correct site. • Team will use methods known to prevent harm from administration of anesthetics, while protecting the patient from pain. • Team will recognize & effectively prepare for life-threatening loss of respiratory function. • Team will recognize and effectively prepare for risk of high blood loss. • Team will avoid inducing an allergic or adverse drug reaction for which the patient is known to be at significant risk.
WHO’s 10 Objectives for Safe Surgery (con’t) • Team will consistently use methods known to minimize the risk for surgical site infection. • Team will prevent inadvertent retention of instruments or sponges in surgical wounds. • Team will secure and accurately identify all surgical specimens. • Team will effectively communicate and exchange critical information for safe conduct of operations. • Hospitals and health systems will establish routine surveillance of surgical capacity, volume and results.
Why safe surgery is important: The facts • Surgical Patient safety has been a persistent topic in the health care systems. Still, many avoidable mistakes — such as operating on the wrong body part or giving an improper medication continue to occur (Prof. Nick Markham). • In 2004 alone, Worldwide, about 234 million operations were done. • A rate of 0.4 - 0.8% deaths & 3-16% complications were recorded globally, meaning, at least 1 million deaths & 7 million complications /year
Why safe surgery is important: The facts • In England and Wales, 129,419 surgery-related incidents were reported to National Reporting and Learning Service (NRLS) in 2007 including 271 deaths. • Previous studies reported crude mortality rate after major surgery between 0.5 and 5%; while post-surgical complications occur in up to 25% of patients;
Why safe surgery is important: The facts • Gen. anesthesia alone is reported to cause 1 in 150 deaths in some parts of sub-Saharan Africa. • Indeveloped nations, half of all recorded adverse events among surgical patients occur in operating rooms. • In developing countries, death rates are estimated to be between 5-10% for major surgeries and half of these adverse events were preventable.
Methodology:A literature review was conducted to ascertain the evidence of efficacy of the WHO-Surgical Safety checklist in saving lives.
Results:1 • A pilot testing of WHO-checklist in 8 countries (Seattle, Toronto, London, Auckland, Amman, New Delhi, Manila, and Tanzania revealed : • Reduction in major complications from 11% before to 7% after checklist introduction . • Dramatic fall of post-Sx deaths by more than 40 % (1.5% to 0.8%) after checklist implementing. NB: Reductions were of equal magnitude in high income and low-income sites in the study.
The Checklist was piloted in 8 cities… EURO EMRO PAHO I London, UK Amman, Jordan Toronto, Canada WPRO I Manila, Philippines PAHO II Seattle, USA WPRO II Auckland, Neozeland AFRO Ifakara, Tanzania SEARO New Delhi, India
Results – All 8 Sites Haynes et al. A Surgical Safety Checklist to Reduce Morbidity and Mortality in a Global Population. New England Journal of Medicine 360:491-9. (2009)
Change in Death & Complications by Site Income Classification Haynes et al. A Surgical Safety Checklist to Reduce Morbidity and Mortality in a Global Population. New England Journal of Medicine 360:491-9. (2009) * p<0.05
Results:2 • Financial Burden: • The famous Harvard surgeon Dr. Gawande’s & his research team has estimated that if WHO Surgical Safety Checklist were implemented in all operating rooms in the U.S., then, the annual cost-savings from the prevention of major complications would range between $15 billion to $25 billion/ year.
Results:2 • A research by Dr. Ellner et al, compared post-operative complications before & after team members participated in three 60-minute training sessions on Using the WHO- safety checklist and to improve OR communication. • They found that this combination has reduced complications for the 30-day period after high-risk surgery by more than 15.9%. • This only tell us that implementing the surgical checklists alone is not enough; there must be effective communication and team building.
Results:3 • Another survey by National Center for Patient Safety found significantly better surgery outcomes for hospitals that put their staff through team training re-affirmed the findings of other studies. It showed that About 80% of adverse events are attributable to failed team communication. • A new study on WHO checklist Usefulness in orthopedics, described the checklist as one major weapon in the armamentarium of the orthopaedic surgeons.
Results:4 • A Cochrane review (2017) on various surgical Safety tools showed that combining checklist integration in systems Plus teamwork training are more effective than adopting either approach alone. • Despite high acceptance of WHO checklist among professional, Some gaps on when & how to use it still exist which can threaten its implementation. • Therefore, efforts should focus on universal awareness and complete knowledge on when and how to use this checklist.
Conclusions & Recommendation • When coupled with team training, WHO-surgical safety checklist was able to reduce complications and save more lives. • We call upon all hospitals to train their surgical teams on when & how to use, modify & adopt the use of WHO-safety Checklist. • We ask all hospital to take part in the WHO-checklist Audit that we plan to conduct in few months time.