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The Trouble With Transvaginal Mesh - August 2016 - Subscribe to Outpatient Surgery Magazine

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So, yes, record one count before starting the next. That's just one of the many lessons AORN gleaned from psychological studies on count- ing that helped shape its updated Guideline for Prevention of Retained Surgical Items. "You have multiple objects to count: sponges, sharps, instruments. We don't want people trying to remember how many sponges there were while they're counting needles," says Amber Wood, MSN, RN, CNOR, CIC, FAPIC, senior perioperative practice specialist with the Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN) in Denver, Colo. When Ms. Wood searched for evidence-based studies on counting in surgery to support AORN's updated retained items guideline, she came up empty. "We simply do not have counting studies in the OR," she says. But when she expanded her search, she happily discovered several studies on the psychology of counting — enumerating to researchers, not counting. It was just the sort of evidence-based research Ms. Wood knew could help shape how and when to count in the OR and lower the incidence of retained surgical items. For example, multitasking — the act of doing more than one thing at the same time, such as remembering and counting — is largely an illusion. You can't do it, at least not well. Researchers believe there is a processing bottleneck in the brain. "You're concurrently using your memory as you're counting, and counting takes up memory," says Ms. Wood. "When our brains switch between counting and remembering, we make transcription errors." Studies have also shown that you can't count accurately beyond 2 when you're distracted, which, in the hustle and bustle of the operat- ing room, explains why foreign objects may be retained after surgery twice as often as the government estimates, or up to 6,000 times a 6 2 • O U T PA T I E N T S U R G E R Y M A G A Z I N E • A U G U S T 2 0 1 6

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