Importance of a Proper Planning of Surgical Procedures in Pediatric Laparoscopy. Theater Checklist ()
1. Introduction
The proper planning of surgery is part of the larger sphere of prevention of errors in surgery [1]. In a study in which the Clavien system [2] was used it resulted that most of the errors found (69.5%) were of little or no consequence and did not cause harm to the patient, but certainly caused stress to the surgeon and the operating team: in the final analysis they can influence the surgical performance [3]. This is particularly important in (mainly pediatric) laparoscopic surgery, where gradually more complex technologies impose an increasing degree of attention.
Concerned by medical errors, Atul Gawande, in his bestseller “The Checklist Manifesto”, has investigated the nature of the failures that plague medicine and has found that as our lives and our work become more complex—An inevitable side effect of technological development—The easier it is to overlook details, sometimes with catastrophic results. That is why checklists are indispensable [4,5].
The purpose of our study was to verify whether the adoption of a laparoscopic checklist specifically prepared for common pediatric laparoscopic procedures can improve the theater performance. In agreement with that proposed by the WHO, in formulating our checklist, we have tried to draw up a short, concise, and easy to compile document from medical and nursing staff [6].
We considered also that there are currently no standardized checklists for use in pediatric laparoscopy.
2. Materials and Methods
We studied the laparoscopic operations performed by a single operator between January 2008 and July 2011. Out of a total of 49 interventions taken into account, only in 22 was it possible to complete the controls in order to highlight the adverse episodes that occurred during the intervention. They were:
4 Bilateral Inguinal Hernia Repairs,
5 Acute Appendectomies6 Left Palomo Varicocelectomies,
1 Hemiureteronephrectomy,
4 Cholecystectomies,
1 Laparoscopic Pyeloplasty,
1 Georgeson—De La Torre,
We considered: The position and orientation of equipment, crew discomfort, and the problems encountered by operators. At this stage the staff was not aware of the study.
In the second phase of the study we set a laparoscopic checklist based on adverse episodes recorded in the 22 previous procedures, which, this time, was shared with the nurses and the surgeons (Figure 1).
The 18 procedures in which it was possible to rigorously apply the checklist, were as follows:
3 Bilateral Inguinal Hernia Repair,
5 Acute Appendectomies,
4 Left Palomo Varicoceltomies,
1 Left Hemiureteronephrectomy,
1 Laparoscopic Pyeloplasty,
1 Nephrectomy,
2 Cholecystectomies,
2 Cholecystectomies,
1 Laparoscopic Orchidopexy,
The adverse episodes registered before and after the adoption of checklist are summarized in Table 1.
Table 1. Shows the adverse episodes registered before and after the adoption of checklist.
(a)
(b)
Figure 1. The theater checklist set for this study.
Figure 2. Graph showing the adverse episodes before and after the adoption of theater checklist.
The graph shows the results (Figure 2).
At the end of this experimental phase we distributed a questionnaire containing short questions to four doctors (1 senior registrar and 4 residents), and the three fixed operating room nurses:
if they considered the adoption of the checklist useful;
if they considered the results satisfactory;
if, in their opinion, the work was less fatiguing;
if they wanted to continue to use the checklist.
3. Results
Only 10 adverse episodes have been recorded, significantly below the 71 episodes recorded before the adoption of the checklist. The questionnaire responses were unanimously positive, both by doctors by nurses.
Although it was not possible to quantify the result, the implementation of preoperative briefings and completing the checklist has been recognized by all members of the team, surgeons and nurses, a valuable tool that has facilitated the tasks of everyone. Particularly appreciated was the entry concerning preoperative briefing.
4. Discussion
The first checklist was developed in aviation in 1935 to allow the continued flying of the prototype Boeing Model 299 of the American bombers B-17. Major Ployer Peter Hill and Boeing employee Les Tower took the Model 299 on a second evaluation flight and, inadvertently, the crew forgot to disengage the “gust locks”, a system of devices that held the bomber’s movable control surfaces in place while the aircraft was parked on the ground. After take-off, the aircraft entered a steep climb, stalled, nosed over, and crashed, killing Hill and Tower (other observers survived with injuries). From then on there has been no flight that hasn’t used a checklist [7].
Based on the recommendations of Guidelines for Surgery, after careful study and overcoming much resistance, in 2009 the WHO built a checklist for safety in the operating room containing 19 items, as a tool to guide the implementation of controls to support the operating team, with the purpose of systematically promoting adherence to the implementation of recommended safety standards to prevent mortality and post-operative complications [6].
We believed that the integration with a theater checklist just intended for the operations of pediatric laparoscopy could be useful and could fit to the recommendations of WHO.
The report of Lenoir and Steinbrecher [8], first poses the problem of a preoperative pediatric checklist for surgeons and nurses after a complex examination of problems related to pediatric laparoscopy. The Authors studied the organization of the surgeries taking into account factors related to ergonomics, fatigue of operators, the organization of the operating room and instrumentation demonstrating that proper planning of interventions improves the performance of the operators and the results.
This was followed by other studies but, at the present, there is still no a standardized checklist for pediatric laparoscopy that meets the criteria of conciseness, convenience, and ease of compilation, although recent studies do suggest such application [9].
The preoperative checklist we set seems to meet the above mentioned criteria and, in our experience, resulted as very useful in preventing intra-operative problems.
5. Conclusion
In conclusion our results, although promising, are based on a small number of patients and further studies and a greater number of patients are needed to confirm these results, but in any case we are firmly convinced that the checklist should be considered an important element in an increasingly complex organization for prevention of errors in surgery.