Kulkarni Arvind Gopalrao, Patel Jwalant Yogeshkumar, Asati Sanjeev, Mewara Navin
Mumbai Spine Scoliosis & Disc Replacement Centre, Bombay Hospital and Medical Research Center, Mumbai, India.
Asian Spine J. 2022 Feb;16(1):38-46. doi: 10.31616/asj.2020.0432. Epub 2021 May 21.
A retrospective study.
This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a novel checklist that was designed specifically for the "spine-surgerysubspecialty" to reduce the incidence of some common preventable human errors and major perioperative complications in spine surgery.
We propose a unique spine surgery-specific checklist that recognizes the risk factors, anticipates the possible human errors, and thus helps in preventing these errors. This checklist is associated with increased patient safety awareness, improved communication (keeps everyone updated regarding their responsibilities), reduction in the surgical claims, and reduction in the number of postoperative complications, including mortality.
This retrospective pilot study was performed at single center on 858 spine surgery patients. The patients were divided into the following two groups: the study group (after implementation of the checklist [2016-2017]) and the control group (before the implementation of the checklist [2015-2016]). The incidence of common preventable human errors and major perioperative complications in spine surgeries were recorded and compared between the two groups.
The prevalence of wrong-level surgeries was 0%, and the overall prevalence of the preventable errors was 1.63% (7/428). The rate of adverse, near-miss, and no-harm events was 0.23% (1/428), 0.70% (3/428) and 0.70% (3/428), respectively. The preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative errors were 0.70% (3/428), 0.23% (1/428), and 0.70 (3/428), respectively. The reoperation rate related to preventable errors reduced after the checklist was used. There were significant differences in the total preventable errors related to complications, such as infections, prolonged hospital stays, and unplanned hospital readmission/revision surgeries (p=0.001).
The authors propose the first-of-its kind spine surgery-specific checklist that is comprehensive and involves perioperative parameters. The checklist is easy to use, safe, and effective for reducing the unforgiving errors and perioperative complications. However, its broader implementation would require validation in large, multi-center, randomized control studies.
一项回顾性研究。
本研究旨在评估专门为“脊柱外科亚专业”设计的新型检查表在降低脊柱手术中一些常见可预防人为失误和主要围手术期并发症发生率方面的有效性。
我们提出了一种独特的针对脊柱手术的检查表,该检查表识别风险因素,预测可能的人为失误,从而有助于预防这些失误。该检查表与提高患者安全意识、改善沟通(让每个人都了解自己的职责)、减少手术索赔以及减少术后并发症(包括死亡率)的数量相关。
这项回顾性试点研究在单一中心对858例脊柱手术患者进行。患者被分为以下两组:研究组(检查表实施后[2016 - 2017年])和对照组(检查表实施前[2015 - 2016年])。记录并比较两组脊柱手术中常见可预防人为失误和主要围手术期并发症的发生率。
错误节段手术的发生率为0%,可预防失误的总体发生率为1.63%(7/428)。不良、险些发生和无伤害事件的发生率分别为0.23%(1/428)、0.70%(3/428)和0.70%(3/428)。术前、术中和术后失误分别为0.70%(即3/428)、0.23%(1/428)和0.70%(3/428)。使用检查表后,与可预防失误相关的再次手术率降低。与并发症(如感染、住院时间延长和计划外再次入院/翻修手术)相关的可预防失误总数存在显著差异(p = 0.001)。
作者提出了首个全面且涉及围手术期参数的针对脊柱手术的检查表。该检查表易于使用、安全且有效地减少了严重失误和围手术期并发症。然而,其更广泛的实施需要在大型、多中心、随机对照研究中进行验证。