• Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf · Apr 2012

    Surfacing safety hazards using standardized operating room briefings and debriefings at a large regional medical center.

    • Jathin Bandari, Kathy Schumacher, Michelle Simon, Danielle Cameron, Christine A Goeschel, Christine G Holzmueller, Martin A Makary, Robert J Welsh, and Sean M Berenholtz.
    • Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA.
    • Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2012 Apr 1;38(4):154-60.

    BackgroundBriefings and debriefings, previously shown to be a practical and feasible strategy to improve interdisciplinary communication and teamwork in the operating room (OR), was then assessed as a strategy to prospectively surface clinical and operational defects in surgical care--and thereby prevent patient harm.MethodsA one-page, double-sided briefing and debriefing tool was used by surgical teams during cases at the William Beaumont Hospital Royal Oak (Royal Oak, Michigan) campus to surface clinical and operational defects during the study period (October 2006-May 2010). Defects were coded into six categories (with each category stratified by briefing or debriefing period) during the first six months, and refinement of coding resulted in expansion to 16 defect categories and no further stratification. A provider survey was used in January 2008 to interview a sample of 40 caregivers regarding the perceived effectiveness of the tool in surfacing defects.FindingsThe teams identified a total of 6,202 defects--an average of 141 defects per month--during the entire study period. Of 2,760 defects identified during the six-defect coding period, 1,265 (46%) surfaced during briefings, and the remaining 1,495 (54%) during debriefings. Equipment (48%) and communication (31%) issues were most prominent. Of 3,442 defects identified during the 16-defect coding period, the most common were Central Processing Department (CPD) instrumentation (22%) and Communication/Safety (15%). Overall, 70 (87%) of the 80 responses were in agreement that briefings were effective for surfacing defects, as were 59 (76%) of the 78 responses for debriefings.ConclusionsBriefings and debriefings were a practical and effective strategy to surface potential surgical defects in the operating rooms of a large medical center.

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