University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia.
Surg Endosc. 2011 Oct;25(10):3385-92. doi: 10.1007/s00464-011-1735-9. Epub 2011 May 18.
Current ergonomic studies show that disruption exposes surgical teams to stress and musculoskeletal disorders. This study considers minimally invasive surgery as a sociotechnical process subjected to a variety of disruption events other than those recognized by ergonomic science. The research takes into consideration the impact of preventable disruption on operating time rather than on the physical and emotional status of the surgical team.
Events inside operating rooms that disturbed operative time were recorded for 17 minimally invasive surgeries. The disruption events were classified into four main areas: prerequisite requirements, work design, communication during surgery, and other. Each area was further classified according to sources of disruption. Altogether, 11 sources of disruption were identified: patient record, protocol and policy, surgical requirements and surgeon preferences, operating table and patient positioning, arrangement of instruments, lighting, monitor, clothing, surgical teamwork, coordination, and other.
Disruption prolonged operative time by more than 32%. Teamwork forms the main source of disruption followed by operating table and patient positioning and arrangement of instruments. These three sources represented approximately 20% of operative time. Failure to follow principles of work design had a significant negative impact, lengthening operative time by approximately 15%. Although lighting and monitors had a relatively small impact on operative time, these factors could create inconvenience and stress within the surgical teams. In addition, the effect of failure to follow surgical protocols and policies or having incomplete patient records may have a limited effect on operative time but could have serious consequences.
This report demonstrates that preventable disruption caused an increase in operative time and forced surgeons and patients to endure unnecessary delay of more than 32%. Such additional time could be used to deal with the pressure of emergency cases and to reduce waiting lists for elective surgery.
当前的工效学研究表明,干扰会使手术团队面临压力和肌肉骨骼疾病。本研究将微创手术视为一种受到各种干扰事件影响的社会技术过程,这些干扰事件超出了工效学科学所认识到的范围。研究考虑了可预防的干扰对手术时间的影响,而不是对手术团队的身体和情绪状态的影响。
记录了 17 例微创手术中手术室内部干扰手术时间的事件。将干扰事件分为四个主要领域:前提要求、工作设计、手术过程中的沟通以及其他。每个领域都根据干扰源进一步分类。总共确定了 11 个干扰源:患者记录、协议和政策、手术要求和外科医生偏好、手术台和患者定位、仪器布置、照明、监视器、服装、手术团队合作、协调以及其他。
干扰使手术时间延长了 32%以上。团队合作是主要的干扰源,其次是手术台和患者定位以及仪器布置。这三个来源约占手术时间的 20%。未能遵循工作设计原则会产生重大负面影响,使手术时间延长约 15%。尽管照明和监视器对手术时间的影响相对较小,但这些因素可能会给手术团队带来不便和压力。此外,未能遵循手术协议和政策或患者记录不完整的影响可能对手术时间的影响有限,但可能会产生严重后果。
本报告表明,可预防的干扰导致手术时间增加,迫使外科医生和患者承受超过 32%的不必要延迟。这些额外的时间可以用于应对急诊病例的压力,并减少择期手术的等候名单。