Treadwell Jonathan R, Lucas Scott, Tsou Amy Y
ECRI Institute, , Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania, USA.
BMJ Qual Saf. 2014 Apr;23(4):299-318. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2012-001797. Epub 2013 Aug 6.
Surgical complications represent a significant cause of morbidity and mortality with the rate of major complications after inpatient surgery estimated at 3-17% in industrialised countries. The purpose of this review was to summarise experience with surgical checklist use and efficacy for improving patient safety.
A search of four databases (MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE and the Cochrane Database of Controlled Trials) was conducted from 1 January 2000 to 26 October 2012. Articles describing actual use of the WHO checklist, the Surgical Patient Safety System (SURPASS) checklist, a wrong-site surgery checklist or an anaesthesia equipment checklist were eligible for inclusion (this manuscript summarises all but the anaesthesia equipment checklists, which are described in the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality publication).
We included a total of 33 studies. We report a variety of outcomes including avoidance of adverse events, facilitators and barriers to implementation. Checklists have been adopted in a wide variety of settings and represent a promising strategy for improving the culture of patient safety and perioperative care in a wide variety of settings. Surgical checklists were associated with increased detection of potential safety hazards, decreased surgical complications and improved communication among operating staff. Strategies for successful checklist implementation included enlisting institutional leaders as local champions, incorporating staff feedback for checklist adaptation and avoiding redundancies with existing systems for collecting information.
Surgical checklists represent a relatively simple and promising strategy for addressing surgical patient safety worldwide. Further studies are needed to evaluate to what degree checklists improve clinical outcomes and whether improvements may be more pronounced in particular settings.
手术并发症是发病和死亡的重要原因,在工业化国家,住院手术后的主要并发症发生率估计为3%-17%。本综述的目的是总结使用手术清单及其在提高患者安全方面的有效性的经验。
检索了四个数据库(MEDLINE、CINAHL、EMBASE和Cochrane对照试验数据库),检索时间为2000年1月1日至2012年10月26日。描述世界卫生组织清单、手术患者安全系统(SURPASS)清单、手术部位错误清单或麻醉设备清单实际使用情况的文章符合纳入标准(本手稿总结了除麻醉设备清单之外的所有内容,麻醉设备清单在医疗保健研究与质量局的出版物中有描述)。
我们共纳入了33项研究。我们报告了各种结果,包括不良事件的避免、实施的促进因素和障碍。清单已在各种环境中采用,是改善各种环境中患者安全文化和围手术期护理的一种有前景的策略。手术清单与潜在安全隐患的检测增加、手术并发症减少以及手术人员之间的沟通改善相关。成功实施清单的策略包括争取机构领导作为当地的倡导者、纳入工作人员的反馈以调整清单以及避免与现有信息收集系统的冗余。
手术清单是全球解决手术患者安全问题的一种相对简单且有前景的策略。需要进一步研究以评估清单在多大程度上改善临床结果,以及在特定环境中改善是否可能更显著。