An anesthetized patient fell to the floor headfirst from an operating room (OR) table during a laparoscopic appendectomy in Scotland. The table had been tilted into an extreme head-down position to facilitate the operation. Fortunately, no injury occurred.
The Edinburgh Evening News account says that there were 10 staff members in the room at the time the case started, but no one had placed a safety restraint on the patient.
The hospital has experienced 11 other major surgical errors in the last year, including two instances of wrong-site surgery and a case in which five swabs were left inside a single patient.
An investigation by the hospital noted that the level of situational awareness of staff in the operating theatre was inadequate, and teamwork and communication were poor. In addition, the safety culture within the OR was described as not highly attuned to patient safety. The staff was also distracted by mobile phone use and idle chatter.
Instead of addressing the obvious human errors such as failure to place the safety strap, which in US hospitals is clearly the duty of the circulating nurse, the hospital’s plan of correction focused on the following typical system-type corrections:
Compulsory training of 1200 staff. Although there were 10 staff for a laparoscopic appendectomy (in the US there would be 4: nurse, scrub tech, surgeon, anesthesiologist), I doubt that there are 1200 people working in the OR of this 570-bed hospital. What will those not working in the OR have to gain from compulsory training? I wonder if anyone considered that 10 staff for an appendectomy is far too many, and that’s why there was a lot of idle chatter. Six of the staff had nothing to do until the patient needed to be picked up off the floor.
A ban on talking at key times during operations. This one will be hard to enforce. Who decides what the key times are? I also don’t see what it had to do with the incident since tilting the table would not be considered a key time in the case.
Daily meetings to improve patient safety. Good luck with that. What on earth are they going to discuss at daily meetings to improve patient safety? I predict that those meetings won’t take place for more than 3 or 4 weeks.
Sanctions for staff who fail to meet the new standards. Also will be hard to enforce. How will this be judged?
I would have talked with the nursing staff and asked them whose job it was to place the safety strap. If you want to make a system change, why not clearly specify which staff member is responsible for that action? And how about using a checklist?
A follow-up story noted that 5 years ago, the Scottish Patient Safety Program recommended using pre-surgery meetings and checklists to protect patients. The investigation showed that checklists were completed about 10% of the time in this hospital and often not properly. The staff claimed that they didn’t have time to do the checklists. Ten people in the room for an appendectomy and no one has time to complete a checklist?
Next, I would have asked the anesthesiologist where he was. Usually the job of adjusting the table is his, and the controls are at the head of the bed. He should have noticed the patient was beginning to slide off the table and intervened.
Finally, I would have asked the surgeon just how much head down tilt he needed. I have never even come close to having a patient more than about 30 degrees of head down during a laparoscopic appendectomy.
Patient falling from an OR table—human error. Wrong site surgery—human error. Leaving foreign objects inside patients—human error.
The OR staff of every hospital counts instruments and swabs. They all know that wrong-site surgery is 100% avoidable. This hospital had a number of appropriate systems in place. The staff simply disregarded them. Creating more meetings and rules that are unlikely to be followed or make a difference will not solve the problem of a staff with a “can’t do” attitude.