Department of Orthopaedics and Trauma Surgery, University Hospital of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
Faculty of Management and Economics, Witten/Herdecke University, Witten, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2020 Feb 20;10(1):3030. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-59816-4.
The objective of this study is to analyze noise patterns during 599 visceral surgical procedures. Considering work-safety regulations, we will identify immanent noise patterns during major visceral surgeries. Increased levels of noise are known to have negative health impacts. Based on a very fine-grained data collection over a year, this study will introduce a new procedure for visual representation of intra-surgery noise progression and pave new paths for future research on noise reduction in visceral surgery. Digital decibel sound-level meters were used to record the total noise in three operating theatres in one-second cycles over a year. These data were matched to archival data on surgery characteristics. Because surgeries inherently vary in length, we developed a new procedure to normalize surgery times to run cross-surgery comparisons. Based on this procedure, dBA values were adjusted to each normalized time point. Noise-level patterns are presented for surgeries contingent on important surgery characteristics: 16 different surgery types, operation method, day/night time point and operation complexity (complexity levels 1-3). This serves to cover a wide spectrum of day-to-day surgeries. The noise patterns reveal significant sound level differences of about 1 dBA, with the most-common noise level being spread between 55 and 60 dBA. This indicates a sound situation in many of the surgeries studied likely to cause stress in patients and staff. Absolute and relative risks of meeting or exceeding 60 dBA differ considerably across operation types. In conclusion, the study reveals that maximum noise levels of 55 dBA are frequently exceeded during visceral surgical procedures. Especially complex surgeries show, on average, a higher noise exposure. Our findings warrant active noise management for visceral surgery to reduce potential negative impacts of noise on surgical performance and outcome.
本研究旨在分析 599 例内脏手术过程中的噪声模式。考虑到工作安全法规,我们将确定主要内脏手术过程中的固有噪声模式。已知噪声水平的增加会对健康产生负面影响。基于一年的精细数据收集,本研究将引入一种新的手术内噪声进展的可视化表示方法,并为未来内脏手术降噪的研究开辟新途径。数字分贝声级计在一年的时间里,以一秒为周期,在三个手术室中记录总噪声。这些数据与手术特征的档案数据相匹配。由于手术固有地在长度上有所不同,我们开发了一种新的程序来使手术时间标准化,以进行跨手术比较。根据该程序,将 dBA 值调整到每个归一化时间点。呈现了与重要手术特征相关的手术的噪声模式:16 种不同的手术类型、手术方法、白天/夜间时间点和手术复杂性(1-3 级)。这涵盖了日常手术的广泛范围。噪声模式揭示了约 1 dBA 的显著声级差异,最常见的噪声级在 55 至 60 dBA 之间分布。这表明在许多研究手术中,可能会对患者和工作人员造成压力。满足或超过 60 dBA 的绝对和相对风险在手术类型之间有很大差异。总之,该研究表明,在内脏手术过程中,55 dBA 的最大噪声水平经常被超过。特别是复杂的手术平均显示出更高的噪声暴露。我们的发现需要对内脏手术进行积极的噪声管理,以降低噪声对手术性能和结果的潜在负面影响。