September 2019 HSC Section 1 Congenital and Pediatric Problems
Volume 44, No. 9, September 2018
final
recommendations, surgical population.
tailored
to
the
specific
needs
of
our
patient
identity
check,
final
procedure
confirmation,
of
site marking
in
field,
and
confirmation
of
visualization
administration
( Figure
1 ).
antibiotic
interdepartmental
electronic meetings,
correspondence,
Following
APPROACH This project
perioperative education,
leadership
and
periopera-
several
tive
team
the
enhanced pediatric Universal Pro-
was
conducted
at
Lucile
Packard
Children’s
tocol ment
was was
initiated. increased employees
Stakeholder
engagement
and
agree- both
Stanford,
a
freestanding,
311-bed
academic hospital
chil-
Hospital
through
active
championing
by
dren’s
hospital
in Northern California. The
has
7
who
are
members anesthesia,
of
the
periopera- perioperative
frontline
rooms
(ORs)
and
12
non-OR
settings,
such
as
operating
tive
QI
team
and
surgical,
and
rooms and providers
interventional
suites. The
ambulatory procedure
leaders.
To
increase
visibility
of
this
novel
compo-
nurse nent,
and
surgical
include
academic
faculty,
anesthesia
residents,
nurse
practitioners,
and
physician
assis-
large
posters were
displayed
in
each OR
and
in
each com- four
fellows,
chart
along
with
the
consent.
In-person
patient’s pliance weeks.
tants.
As
a
quaternary
care
trauma ICUs,
center
with
neonatal,
audits
were
performed
by
OR
nurses
over
and
cardiovascular
the surgical population from complex neonates
pediatric,
includes a diverse group of patients,
ambulatory
procedures
on
healthy Review quality
children.
The
Stan-
to
ford
University
Institutional
Board
approved
a
OUTCOMES Convenience
of
consent
for
this
improvement
(QI)
waiver project. The
audits of 60
safety
stop
and
time-out
compo-
perioperative
QI
team,
consisting
of physicians, accreditation
nents
of
the
enhanced Universal
Protocol were
completed
four weeks. Of
those
completed, 96.7%
(58/60) demon-
in
and
an
nurses, pharmacists, quality managers,
regulatory
compliance
specialist,
used
an
A3
project
strated
compliance perioperative
with
the
new
policy.
Verbal
feedback
and plan
9 Current
to
guide development of
a new process.
state
members
involved
was
unanimously
from
positive.
revealed
that had
the
time-out was
performed
after
the
analysis
the
subsequent
Joint Commission
accreditation
During
completed
all
induction
procedures
anesthesiologists
prior
to
P&D. This was
intentionally
done
to
ensure
the
enhanced
pediatric Universal
Protocol with
in-
and that the
survey, clusion
of
the
safety
stop
was
highlighted
by
The
Joint
the
correct
patient
and
surgical
site were
prepared
by of
as
a
leading practice.
Commission
circulating RNs. Unlike
an
adult,
the
operative field
pediatric
patient
is
relatively
smaller,
increasing
the
pos- body
a
10 Also,
sibility
of wrong-site
preparation.
due
to
the
KEY INSIGHTS QI methodology was
relative
to
the OR
table,
a
child’s
limbs
are
often
not
size
beyond
the
table
on
arm
boards,
which
further
used
to
optimize
the Universal
Pro-
extended reduces
11 Although
visual
cues
and
worsens
access
to
the
name
band with- could
tocol
for
pediatric
patients
at
our
institution.
P&D. Multiple
surgeons
were
concerned
that site
that
simply moving
the
time-out
from solu- P&D bod- table.
after
initially we believed
out
a
safety
check
prior
to
P&D,
the
wrong
to
P&D
to
just
prior
to
incision surgeons’
would
be
a
prior tion,
inadvertently
prepared,
which
could
lead
to
a
wrong-
further
analysis
revealed
concerns
of
be
site
or
wrong-patient
surgery
despite
a
time-out
prior
to
wrong being
site
or
wrong
patient
due
to
their
small
the ies
After
problem
analysis,
we
decided Protocol,
to
imple-
obscured
by
draping
on
a
typical
OR
incision.
ment safety
a
novel
adjunct
to
the Universal
called
the
the
Joint Commission
report
that wrong-site, wrong-
Given
stop .
procedure, wrong-patient ond most commonly
surgeries
continue
to
be
the
sec-
safety
stop would
occur
just
prior
to
patient P&D,
reported
sentinel event, developing an
The
the
time-out would be performed
just prior
to incision, circulating
to mitigate
the
risk of
these events was an
and
enhanced protocol
12 By
with WHO
recommendations.
The
for
the
development
of
the
safety
stop.
using
aligning OR nurse
impetus
initiated
the
safety
stop after
the anesthesiologists
team
approach
to
the
development
of
the
safety
stop, we
a
completed
all
induction
procedures.
This
time
point
the new process. The
had
achieved near perfect compliance with
in
the
chart
as
“anesthesia
ready.” Participants
audits
that were noncompliant were
associated with
an
was denoted
two OR with
the
safety
stop
included
all
personnel
in
the OR,
who
RN who
had
been
recently
hired
and was
unfamiliar
in
were
a
surgical
attending
or
fellow,
anesthesiol-
our
novel
process, which
reinforced
the
need
to
em-
typically
ogist,
circulating
RN,
and
surgical
scrub
technician.
Key
phasize
this
component
of
the Universal
Protocol
during
of
the
safety
stop
included
introduction
of
all
components personnel by
orientation.
name, readily
the
arm
band
patient
identifier
check
to
the Universal Protocol
that
are
applica- 7,8 Lee
Modifications
was
available
prior
to
P&D),
procedure expected
ble
for
the
pediatric
population
have
been
reported. performed
(which
against written administration,
consent,
site marking,
an
extended induction
surgical
time-out
prior con-
verification antibiotic
described
anticipated
postoperative
desti-
anesthesia
(in
addition incision)
to
the
time-out
to
nation,
and
fire
risk
( Figure
1 ).
The
time-out
included
a
ducted
immediately
before
and
showed
that
the
2
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