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Incidence and characteristics of errors detected by a short team briefing in pediatric anesthesia.

Authors :
Keil O
Brunsmann K
Boethig D
Dennhardt N
Eismann H
Girke S
Horke A
Nickel K
Rigterink V
Sümpelmann R
Beck CE
Source :
Paediatric anaesthesia [Paediatr Anaesth] 2022 Oct; Vol. 32 (10), pp. 1144-1150. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Jul 31.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: In our institution, a modified WHO surgical safety checklist was implemented more than ten years ago. In retrospect, we noticed that pediatric anesthesia was underrepresented in our surgical safety checklist modification. Therefore, we added a standardized team briefing (pedSOAP-M) immediately before induction of anesthesia and hypothesized that the use of this checklist was effective to detect relevant errors with potentially harmful consequences.<br />Aims: The primary aim was to assess the incidence and characteristics of the detected errors, and the secondary aim was to identify factors influencing error detection.<br />Methods: This prospective observational study was performed between November 2020 and October 2021 in five operation rooms at the Children's Hospital of Hannover Medical School, Germany. The subcategories of the pedSOAP-M checklist were suction, oxygen, airway, pharmaceuticals, and monitoring. Demographic and procedure-related data and the briefing results were documented anonymously and undated, using a standardized case report form.<br />Results: We enrolled 1030 and analyzed 1025 patients (aged 0-18 years). Relevant errors were detected in 111 (10.8%) cases (suction 2.5%, oxygen 3.0%, airway 0.2%, pharmaceuticals 2.4%, monitoring 3.0%). In the pharmaceuticals subcategory, the most common error was entering a wrong patient weight into the perfusor syringe pumps. Experienced anesthetists detected significantly more errors than less experienced ones.<br />Conclusion: The briefing tool pedSOAP-M was effective in detecting relevant errors with potentially harmful consequences. The presence of an experienced anesthetist was associated with a higher efficacy of the briefing. Particular attention should be given to entering patient weight into the anesthesia workstation and the perfusor syringe pumps.<br /> (© 2022 The Authors. Pediatric Anesthesia published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1460-9592
Volume :
32
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Paediatric anaesthesia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35876723
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/pan.14535