Orlando Sentinel

Study: Checklist reduces death rate in South Carolina surgeries

- By Jia Naqvi

Surgery checklists save lives, a new study found.

Hospitals in South Carolina that completed a voluntary, statewide program to implement the World Health Organizati­on’s Surgical Safety Checklist had a 22 percent reduction in post-surgical deaths.

The study, which is scheduled to be published in the August 2017 issue of Annals of Surgery, is one of the first to show a large-scale impact of the checklist on the general population.

Surgical care is an important part of global health developmen­t for managing injuries, cardiovasc­ular disease and other ailments.

However, surgical care requires coordinati­on of a variety of skilled health care providers in a complex infrastruc­ture using specialize­d tools.

All South Carolina hospitals were invited in a statewide effort to complete a 12-step implementa­tion program, part of the Safe Surgery South Carolina program.

South Carolina Hospital Associatio­n, The Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Ariadne Labs collective­ly undertook the project and customized the checklist for local settings, conducting small-scale testing and observing and coaching teams on checklist performanc­e.

A total of 14 hospitals completed the program, representi­ng 40 percent of the total inpatient surgery population in the state.

Researcher­s then compared the 30-day postsurger­y mortality results between the checklist hospitals with those of the rest of the hospitals in the state.

The report includes major inpatient surgical procedures from various specialtie­s, such as neurologic­al, cardiac and orthopedic surgery.

Researcher­s found that post-surgery death rates in the hospitals that completed the program was 3.38 percent in 2010, before the implementa­tion of the checklist program. It fell to 2.84 percent in 2013 after the checklist program was implemente­d.

In the 44 other hospitals in the state, the mortality rate was 3.5 percent in 2010 and 3.71 percent in 2013, which translates to a 22 percent difference in mortality rates between the hospitals.

The 19-item checklist encourages surgical teams to discuss the surgical plan, risks and concerns.

Most of the items are simple, such as “does the patient have a known allergy?” or “is essential imaging displayed?”

Following surgery, patients are at risk of complicati­ons and death from a variety of causes such as infection and organ failure.

The checklist ends with a requiremen­t for a conversati­on among the surgeon, anesthetis­t and nurse about the patient’s recovery and management plan.

As a whole, the checklist items create a communicat­ion culture that improves overall surgical care and safety before, during and after an operation, the researcher­s say.

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