September 2019 HSC Section 1 Congenital and Pediatric Problems
Reprinted by permission of Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2018; 44(9):552-556.
The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety 2018; 44:552–556
Safety
Stop: A Valuable Addition
to
the Pediatric
Universal Protocol Thomas J. Caruso, MD, MEd; Farrukh Munshey, MD, FRCPC; Brea Aldorfer, MS, RN, CPHQ; Paul J.
Sharek, MD,
MPH
Problem Definition: The World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines and Joint Commission requirements state that the time-out component of the Universal Protocol for Preventing Wrong Site, Wrong Procedure, and Wrong Person Surgery TM must be performed just prior to incision. A mock Joint Commission survey at one institution revealed that the time-out was performed prior to preparation and draping (P&D) of the patient, not afterward, representing both a patient and regulatory risk. Approach: The multidisciplinary perioperative quality improvement team at a freestanding, quaternary care, academic pediatric hospital led the development of a new time-out process. An enhanced pediatric Universal Protocol, which included a new component, the safety stop, was created. The safety stop occurred just prior to P&D of the patient, and the time-out was performed just prior to incision, aligning with WHO recommendations. After electronic correspondence and several pe- rioperative leadership meetings, the enhanced pediatric Universal Protocol was initiated. Compliance audits were performed to demonstrate comprehensive adoption. Outcomes: In seven operating room locations, 60 audits were completed in four weeks, with 96.7% (58/60) demonstrat- ing compliance with the new policy. During a subsequent Joint Commission accreditation survey, the enhanced pediatric Universal Protocol with inclusion of the safety stop was highlighted as a leading practice. Key Insights: Although initially it was believed that moving the time-out from prior to P&D to just prior to incision would be a simple solution, flow mapping the complete time-out process identified significant risk of wrong-site or wrong- patient surgery with this solution. This risk was exacerbated by the small body size of pediatric patients being obscured by draping on a typical operating room table.
procedure.” 3 (p. 11)
PROBLEM DEFINITION During the last decade,
confirming
the
correct
patient,
site
and
Joint Commission
requirements
and WHO
recommenda-
there
has
been marked
improve-
tions
state
that
the
time-out
is
to
be
performed
just
prior
1 The
ment
in
perioperative
surgical
safety.
development
incision,
after
preparation
and
draping
(P&D)
of
the
to
successful
implementations
of
surgical
safety
check- adverse being Safety “Safe
and lists
3–4 At
to minimize
surgical morbidity
and mortality.
patient
have
played
a
significant
role
in minimizing
institution, prior
to a
routine
Joint Commission accred-
our
in
the
perioperative
period,
the most
notable
events
itation
survey,
a mock
survey
recorded
that we
performed
Health
Organization
(WHO)
Surgical
the World Checklist.
time-out prior
to P&D
of
the patient, not
afterward
as
the
1–3 Introduced
in
2008
as
part
of
the
5
a patient
safety
and
regulatory
risk.
recommended, posing
the
checklist was 2009 . The
revised
in
Surgery Saves Lives” campaign,
Despite
evidence
to
the
effectiveness
of
the
Universal
the WHO Guidelines
for
Safe
Surgery
guidelines
adults,
there
continues
to be
implementation
Protocol with
10
“essential team will
objectives
for
safe
surgery,” beginning
feature
compliance
variability
to
the
Universal
Protocol
in
and
“The
operate
on
the
correct
patient
at
the
with
6 Stakeholder
hospitals. training,
disengagement,
absence
pediatric
site.” 3 (p. 10) One
of WHO’s
“highly
recommended”
correct
formal
and unreliable process
compliance mea-
of
as
“a
practice
that that
should
be
in
place
in
practices—defined
sures
contribute
to
the
lack
of
widespread,
standardized
operation” 3 (p. 7) —to meet the Universal Protocol. As
first
objective
is
the
every
6 Although
tailoring
the
Universal
Protocol
to to
adoption.
of
developed Universal Procedure,
and mandated
use
pediatric
population
has
been
reported
as
an
effort
the
The
Joint
Commission,
the
Protocol
for
by
7,8 no
compliance,
formal
recommended
pediatric
increase standard
Wrong
Site,
Wrong
and
Wrong
Preventing
from accredited bodies exists.
Incorrect and partial
TM is
Surgery
a
three-step
process
consisting
of
Person
of
the Universal Protocol
contributes
to
increased
risks
use
time-out. 4
verification,
site marking,
and
a
preprocedure The WHO complementary
in the perioperative pediatric population. 7
events
of adverse
guidelines
note
that
each
of
the
three
steps
“is of
Prompted
by of
both
the mock
Joint Commission
survey
and
adds
redundancy
to
the
practice
the
goal
reducing
patient
risk,
we
embarked
on
a
and
improvement
effort
to
develop
a
novel WHO
multidisciplinary
1553-7250/$-see front matter © 2018 The Joint Commission. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcjq.2018.03.015
Universal
Protocol
that
aligned
with
pediatric
1
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