3.9 Article

Wrong-Site and Wrong-Patient Procedures in the Universal Protocol Era Analysis of a Prospective Database of Physician Self-reported Occurrences

Journal

ARCHIVES OF SURGERY
Volume 145, Issue 10, Pages 978-984

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/archsurg.2010.185

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Objective: To determine the frequency, root cause, and outcome of wrong-site and wrong-patient procedures in the era of the Universal Protocol. Design: Analysis of a prospective physician insurance database performed from January 1, 2002, to June 1, 2008. Deidentified cases were screened using predefined taxonomy filters, and data were analyzed by evaluation criteria defined a priori. Setting: Colorado. Patients: Database contained 27 370 physician self-reported adverse occurrences. Main Outcome Measures: Descriptive statistics were generated to examine the characteristics of the reporting physicians, the number of adverse events reported per year, and the root causes and occurrence-related patient outcomes. Results: A total of 25 wrong-patient and 107 wrong-site procedures were identified during the study period. Significant harm was inflicted in 5 wrong-patient procedures (20.0%) and 38 wrong-site procedures (35.5%). One patient died secondary to a wrong-site procedure (0.9%). The main root causes leading to wrong-patient procedures were errors in diagnosis (56.0%) and errors in communication (100%), whereas wrong-site occurrences were related to errors in judgment (85.0%) and the lack of performing a time-out (72.0%). Nonsurgical specialties were involved in the cause of wrong-patient procedures and contributed equally with surgical disciplines to adverse outcome related to wrong-site occurrences. Conclusions: These data reveal a persisting high frequency of surgical never events. Strict adherence to the Universal Protocol must be expanded to nonsurgical specialties to promote a zero-tolerance philosophy for these preventable incidents.

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