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General Anesthesia Contributes to Post-op Pain

Some "noxious" general anesthetics excite sensory neurons that cause peripheral pain in patients once they wake from surgery, researchers say. I...

WHO Issues Surgical Safety Checklist

The World Health Organization and the Harvard University School of Public Health have created a new perioperative checklist for surgical team member...

Surgical Business Ethics in the Press

It's no secret that some leading orthopedic surgeons receive six- and seven-figure payments annually from the makers of artificial hips and knees. B...

Home > Archive > December 2007
How We Prevent Retained Objects
Don't let the rush of efficiency compromise your patients' safety.
Barbara Nalley

Surgical counts have been documented in clinical practice since the beginning of the 20th century.1 AORN published its first standards for counts in 1976. In spite of these efforts, retained object medical errors still occur. What's more, surgical personnel may not even realize how they're committing these errors. A recent study showed that in 88 percent of cases involving an item left inside a patient, the closing count was documented as correct.[2]

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