Page Braeden M, Urbach David R, Pisani Michaela, Brull Richard
From the Women's College Hospital Research Institute, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Ont. (Page, Urbach, Pisani, Brull); Institute of Medical Science, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont. (Page, Urbach); Department of Surgery, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont. (Urbach); Department of Surgery, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Ont. (Urbach); Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont. (Brull)
From the Women's College Hospital Research Institute, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Ont. (Page, Urbach, Pisani, Brull); Institute of Medical Science, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont. (Page, Urbach); Department of Surgery, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont. (Urbach); Department of Surgery, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Ont. (Urbach); Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont. (Brull).
Can J Surg. 2025 May 21;68(3):E182-E189. doi: 10.1503/cjs.003324. Print 2025 May-Jun.
The Surgical Safety Checklist (SSC) is a communication tool used to improve patient safety and teamwork within operating rooms. Unlike the sign-in and timeout phases, the timing for completion of the sign-out phase is ambiguous, lacks a clear and definitive clinical anchor on when to be performed, and fails to capture important safety data related to the patient's emergence from anesthesia, wherein the risks of complications are greatest. We sought to assess perceptions of operating room team members on whether emergence from anesthesia is an appropriate clinical anchor to conduct the SSC sign-out phase.
In this single-centre proof-of-concept quality-improvement study, the sign-out phase of the SSC was performed following patient emergence from anesthesia. Operating room team members from surgery, anesthesiology, and nursing were approached to complete a self-administered questionnaire. Participants were asked whether, compared with routine sign-out performance, performing the sign-out phase following emergence from anesthesia maximized patient safety, compliance, communication, team member availability, and quality improvement. Responses were graded on a 5-point Likert scale.
Eighty-two operating room team members participated in our study. After experiencing the intervention, most participants agreed or strongly agreed that performing the sign-out phase following emergence from anesthesia maximized patient safety (70.7%), compliance (67.1%), communication (75.6%), and quality improvement (67.0%). More than half agreed that performing the sign-out following emergence from anesthesia maximized team member availability (59.8%).
This proof-of-concept quality-improvement study suggests that emergence from anesthesia is an appropriate clinical anchor for the time to perform the SSC sign-out phase.
手术安全核对表(SSC)是一种用于提高手术室患者安全和团队协作的沟通工具。与签到和暂停阶段不同,签出阶段的完成时间不明确,缺乏何时进行的明确且确定的临床依据,并且未能获取与患者麻醉苏醒相关的重要安全数据,而在此阶段并发症风险最大。我们试图评估手术室团队成员对于麻醉苏醒是否是进行SSC签出阶段的合适临床依据的看法。
在这项单中心概念验证质量改进研究中,SSC的签出阶段在患者麻醉苏醒后进行。我们邀请了来自外科、麻醉科和护理部门的手术室团队成员完成一份自填式问卷。参与者被问及与常规签出操作相比,在麻醉苏醒后进行签出阶段是否能最大程度地提高患者安全、依从性、沟通、团队成员的可及性以及质量改进。回答按照5级李克特量表进行评分。
82名手术室团队成员参与了我们的研究。在经历干预后,大多数参与者同意或强烈同意在麻醉苏醒后进行签出阶段能最大程度地提高患者安全(70.7%)、依从性(67.1%)、沟通(75.6%)和质量改进(67.0%)。超过半数的人同意在麻醉苏醒后进行签出能最大程度地提高团队成员的可及性(59.8%)。
这项概念验证质量改进研究表明,麻醉苏醒是进行SSC签出阶段的合适临床依据。