• J. Am. Coll. Surg. · May 2011

    Multicenter Study

    Effective surgical safety checklist implementation.

    • Dante M Conley, Sara J Singer, Lizabeth Edmondson, William R Berry, and Atul A Gawande.
    • Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA. cdante@uw.edu
    • J. Am. Coll. Surg. 2011 May 1;212(5):873-9.

    BackgroundResearch suggests that surgical safety checklists can reduce mortality and other postoperative complications. The real world impact of surgical safety checklists on patient outcomes, however, depends on the effectiveness of hospitals' implementation processes.Study DesignWe studied implementation processes in 5 Washington State hospitals by conducting semistructured interviews with implementation leaders and surgeons from September to December 2009. Interviews were transcribed, analyzed, and compared with findings from previous implementation research to identify factors that distinguish effective implementation.ResultsQualitative analysis suggested that effectiveness hinges on the ability of implementation leaders to persuasively explain why and adaptively show how to use the checklist. Coordinated efforts to explain why the checklist is being implemented and extensive education regarding its use resulted in buy-in among surgical staff and thorough checklist use. When implementation leaders did not explain why or show how the checklist should be used, staff neither understood the rationale behind implementation nor were they adequately prepared to use the checklist, leading to frustration, disinterest, and eventual abandonment despite a hospital-wide mandate.ConclusionsThe impact of surgical safety checklists on patient outcomes is likely to vary with the effectiveness of each hospital's implementation process. Further research is needed to confirm these findings and reveal additional factors supportive of checklist implementation.Copyright © 2011 American College of Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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