Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Special Outpatient Surgery Edition - Staff and Patient Safety - October 2018

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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Of course, even the most-efficient and accountable teams can still make mistakes. That's why Ms. Wood suggests you rely on the per- spective of an outside observer to identify potential problems that increase the risk of objects being left in patients. Ms. Cerese says you need to put a system in place that makes it easy for surgical team members to do the right thing and create an environment where everyone in the OR is empowered to speak up if the final count is off, or if it's not given enough attention. "Eliminating hierarchy in the OR is really important," says Ms. Cerese, "and that comes from the role-modeling of surgical leaders." OSM O C T O B E R 2 0 1 8 • O U T PA T I E N T S U R G E R Y. N E T • 6 5 Preventing retained surgical items starts with creating a standardized counting policy that demands 100% compliance from all stakeholders in your facility, says Barbara Pelletreau, RN, senior vice presi- dent of patient safety at Dignity Health in San Fran-cisco, Calif. She helped implement the Sponge Accounting System (SAS) within her health system's 40 hospitals. The system consists of 3 phases: • See. Open a sponge package, separate the sponges and spread them out in rows of 10 to confirm that the count in each pack is cor- rect. (Sponges come packaged in No Sponges Left Behind • IN PLAIN SIGHT Loading sponge holders from the bottom up makes it easier for members of the surgical team to spot empty pockets. EXACT COUNT

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