Mayer Erik K, Sevdalis Nick, Rout Shantanu, Caris Jochem, Russ Stephanie, Mansell Jenny, Davies Rachel, Skapinakis Petros, Vincent Charles, Athanasiou Thanos, Moorthy Krishna, Darzi Ara
Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Ann Surg. 2016 Jan;263(1):58-63. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000001185.
To evaluate impact of WHO checklist compliance on risk-adjusted clinical outcomes, including the influence of checklist components (Sign-in, Time-out, Sign-out) on outcomes.
There remain unanswered questions surrounding surgical checklists as a quality and safety tool, such as the impact in cases of differing complexity and the extent of checklist implementation.
Data were collected from surgical admissions (6714 patients) from March 2010 to June 2011 at 5 academic and community hospitals. The primary endpoint was any complication, including mortality, occurring before hospital discharge. Checklist usage was recorded as checklist completed in full/partly. Multilevel modeling was performed to investigate the association between complications/mortality and checklist completion.
Significant variability in checklist usage was found: although at least 1 of the 3 components was completed in 96.7% of cases, the entire checklist was only completed in 62.1% of cases. Checklist completion did not affect mortality reduction, but significantly lowered risk of postoperative complication (16.9% vs. 11.2%), and was largely noticed when all 3 components of the checklist had been completed (odds ratio = 0.57, 95% confidence interval: 0.37-0.87, P < 0.01). Calculated population-attributable fractions showed that 14% (95% confidence interval: 7%-21%) of the complications could be prevented if full completion of the checklist was implemented.
Checklist implementation was associated with reduced case-mix-adjusted complications after surgery and was most significant when all 3 components of the checklist were completed. Full, as opposed to partial, checklist completion provides a health policy opportunity to improve checklist impact on surgical safety and quality of care.
评估遵循世界卫生组织(WHO)检查表对风险调整后的临床结局的影响,包括检查表各组成部分(签到、暂停、签出)对结局的影响。
围绕手术检查表作为一种质量和安全工具仍存在一些未解决的问题,例如在不同复杂程度的病例中的影响以及检查表的实施程度。
收集了2010年3月至2011年6月期间5家学术和社区医院手术入院患者(6714例)的数据。主要终点是出院前发生的任何并发症,包括死亡。检查表的使用情况记录为检查表全部/部分完成。进行多水平建模以研究并发症/死亡率与检查表完成情况之间的关联。
发现检查表的使用情况存在显著差异:虽然96.7%的病例至少完成了3个组成部分中的1个,但仅62.1%的病例完成了整个检查表。检查表的完成并未影响死亡率的降低,但显著降低了术后并发症的风险(16.9%对11.2%),并且在检查表的所有3个组成部分都完成时效果最为明显(优势比=0.57,95%置信区间:0.37 - 0.87,P<0.01)。计算得出的人群归因分数表明,如果全面实施检查表,14%(95%置信区间:7% - 21%)的并发症可以得到预防。
检查表的实施与手术后病例组合调整后的并发症减少相关,并且在检查表的所有3个组成部分都完成时最为显著。与部分完成相比,全面完成检查表为改善检查表对手术安全性和护理质量的影响提供了一个卫生政策机会。