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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limit the amount of controlled substances circulating through your facility. First, keep automated dispensing cabinets in a secure area with limit- ed foot traffic. Also try to ensure the cabinets are located as close as possible to the ORs or within each room, so anesthesia providers and staff members aren't tempted to pull medications for more than one case, a practice that increases the amount of time medications are unsecure and available for diversion. To safeguard and protect against diversion, minimize the amount of leftover medication that needs wasting — here's where prefilled syringes can again prove beneficial — and eliminate leftover amounts as soon as possible after cases end. It's tempting — and often more practical — to hold onto leftover amounts of controlled substances until a witness is available to verify that proper wasting takes place. But the significant amount of time that could pass before a witness becomes available could provide staff members with unmonitored access to the leftover medications and additional opportunities to divert the substances. You must have a process in place that ensures your surgical team is accountable for properly wasting leftover amounts of controlled substances. Make sure excess amounts are wasted as soon as prac- tically possible after cases end. The wasting of controlled sub- stances by one member of the surgical team should be witnessed by a second team member. Both staff members involved should sign off on the amount of drug that was wasted. Don't underestimate what providers who are battling addiction will do to get their next fix. Drug diverters have been known to look for trace amounts of medications in syringes or vials tossed into conventional disposal containers. Controlled substance waste recep- 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 • 7 3

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