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Outpatient Surgery E-Weekly

Contact Congress Over Drug Shortage Issues

A Kentucky congressman is urging surgical facilities to contact their members of Congress and request that they sign his letter demanding changes to...

N.J. Posts ASC Inspection Reports Online

State and federal inspection reports of New Jersey's ASCs are now available online, giving patients an opportunity to make more informed choices abo...

Are Opioids Necessary?

While it's not always practical, or even possible, to eliminate opioids from your post-op pain management regiment, reducing their use in favor of n...

Outpatient Surgery E-Weekly March 9th, 2010

THIS WEEK'S ARTICLES

Study: Anesthesia Awareness May Trigger Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Trained Providers Lower Propofol Risks
Wrong-Site Errors Plague Nerve Blocks, Too
InstaPoll: How Do You Recognize and Reward Your Staff?

NEWS & NOTES

Tip of the week
Speak up for safety
MH drill kit
Suture silk from underwater?
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LAST WEEK'S E-WEEKLY ARTICLES

Can Protein-Free Diets Reduce Surgical Complications?
Robotic Surgery Patients May Have Unrealistic Expectations
Making the Most of a Staffing Dollar
InstaPoll: Who Will Face President Obama This November?
News & Notes
Study: Anesthesia Awareness May Trigger Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Nearly two-thirds of patients who experienced intraoperative awareness suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder 5 years after their surgeries, according to researchers who followed up with patients in Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong.

"Long-term psychological follow-up should be offered to patients who report awareness regardless of their early postoperative psychological state," suggest the researchers, who published their findings in the March issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia.

The research team surveyed patients who'd experienced awareness during a clinical trial of 2.463 surgical patients designed to study the efficacy of bispectral monitoring. Seven of the 13 patients who'd experienced awareness were still alive, and 5 of them reported symptoms of PTSD, according to the article.

It's not certain, however, that anesthesia awareness caused the PTSD in each case, writes George Mashour, MD, PhD, of the University of Michigan Medical School in an accompanying editorial. The patients in the trial were undergoing potentially stressful high-risk surgeries and may have suffered from other illness-related factors. "Medical events, such as myocardial infarction, can be associated with PTSD," he writes.

Regardless, concludes Dr. Mashour, the high rate of PTSD "reinforces the need for preventing intraoperative awareness."

Kent Steinriede

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.

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January 24th E-WEEKLY

Long Hours, Inactivity Linked to Nurse Obesity
Antimicrobial Scrubs Help Reduce Infection Risks
Preview OR Excellence 2012 Online
InstaPoll: Nurses and Obsesity
News & Notes
Trained Providers Lower Propofol Risks

The airway complication risks associated with the use of propofol during advanced endoscopic procedures are lower when trained professionals deliver the sedative and monitor patients, say researchers.

For a study appearing in the February issue of Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, physicians at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo., observed the incidence of airway modifications in 799 patients who were administered propofol by a CRNA before endoscopic ultrasound, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography and small-bowel enteroscopy.

Airway modifications were needed 14.4% of the time, including 97 chin lifts to improve upper airway patency, 29 modified facemask ventilations to deliver higher flows of oxygen and 28 nasal tube insertions to prevent the tongue from blocking airflow. Hypoxemia was the most commonly reported adverse event, occurring in 12.8% of procedures, but no patients required bag-mask ventilation or endotracheal intubation.

Sreeni Jonnalagadda, MD, FASGE, the study's lead author, says the patients at highest risk - the morbidly obese and those with an ASA class of 3 or higher - should be managed by providers trained in advanced airway interventions, but if sedation is maintained at conscious sedation level, lesser degrees of training may be sufficient.

Still, he notes, "We feel that the person administering propofol needs to be trained well enough that [she] can recognize and rescue patients who develop laryngospasm, hypoxemia and hypotension. In my opinion, providers cannot transition from standard conscious sedation to propofol sedation without additional training."

Daniel Cook

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.

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January 17th E-WEEKLY

When Do Surgeons Hit Their Prime?
Incident Reporting Systems Capture Few Adverse Events
Ergonomics and Exercise Ensure Wellness at Work
InstaPoll: Do You Appreciate Your Instrument Reprocessors?
News & Notes
Wrong-Site Errors Plague Nerve Blocks, Too

A study examining the frequency and causes of wrong-site injections in pain management procedures recommends strict use of the Universal Protocol in order to reduce the incidence of such errors.

Noting the lack of clinical literature on the topic, researchers reviewed 2 years' worth of quality improvement records from 3 private practices, 4 teaching hospitals and 3 military treatment facilities for the study, which appeared in the March issue of the journal Anesthesiology.

Out of 48,941 cases, they found 52.4% were at risk of committing wrong-site errors and 13 involved such an error (an incidence rate of 0.027%). Root cause analyses showed that in the 13 error-stricken cases, only 1 of the surgical teams completely followed the Joint Commission's Universal Protocol to prevent such errors. In 9 of the cases, there was more than 1 diversion from the protocol. And in 7 of the cases, the patient was aware that a wrong-site error was occurring.

Adapting the protocol's site marking, time out and verification steps to interventional pain management procedures and vigilantly employing them to every case can go a long way toward eliminating such errors, the researchers conclude.

David Bernard

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.

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January 10th E-WEEKLY

Surgery, Anesthesia Linked to Decline in Memory and Learning
Can Blindness Following Spine Surgery Be Prevented?
What Is, and Isn't, Sexual Harassment?
InstaPoll: Injection Practices Among Anesthesia Providers
News & Notes
InstaPoll: How Do You Recognize and Reward Your Staff?

Food. Money. Gift cards. Paid time off. When your staff go above and beyond the call of duty, as a manager you want to reward them for their efforts. Tell us what your preferred employee recognition strategy is in this week's poll question. We'll report the results in this space next week.

Last week, 227 respondents told us their average room turnover times. Here's the breakdown:

  • 5 minutes or less: 17%

  • 6 to 10 minutes: 31%

  • 11 to 20 minutes: 36%

  • more than 21 minutes: 16%

    Dan O'Connor

  • © Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.

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    January 3rd E-WEEKLY

    Whistleblowing Nurses Suffer Long-Term Emotional Scars
    New Knee Implants Increase Likelihood of Revisions
    A Clean Sweep for Surgical Suites
    InstaPoll: Testing New Hires for Nicotine
    News & Notes
    News & Notes
  • Tip of the week When it comes to cutting facility expenses, every little bit helps, especially if that little bit is part of a big budget item. In an effort to get her staff to turn out a room's lights at the end of the day, Susan Roland, RN, held a contest: who can guess the amount of the center's monthly electric bill? Most of the staffers discovered they'd low-balled the amount. And more lightswitches were flipped on the way out the door.

  • Speak up for safety Communication is the theme of Patient Safety Awareness Week, which runs from March 7 to 13 this year. The slogan "Let's Talk: Healthy Conversations for Safer Healthcare" encourages providers to plan educational activities for staff and patients on the importance of openly discussing safety concerns. For ideas, see the National Patient Safety Foundation's suggested activities for healthcare providers and tools and resources for patient education.

  • MH drill kit The Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States has developed an MH drill kit designed to improve your staff's emergency response efforts. The kit costs $150 and includes laminated task cards outlining the responsibilities of providers involved in an MH code, a 22-minute instructional DVD, drill instructions, a report card, case scenarios, a training booklet and a demonstration on dantrolene mixing. To order a kit, visit MHAUS's Web site, call (607) 674-7901 or e-mail info@mhaus.org.

  • Suture silk from underwater? Noting that the silk created by several species of caddisflies (Trichoptera) remains sticky underwater, researchers at the University of Utah are speculating that it may provide clues to creating adhesive sutures that can stick to wet tissue. Caddisfly larvae, known to fishermen as "rock rollers," extrude the protein-and-phosphate silk to spin a tube-shaped shelter for their development, according to a study published online last week by the journal Biomacromolecules. The silk has similar properties to the glue with which sandcastle worms build underwater homes.
  • © Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.

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    December 27th E-WEEKLY

    FDA Collaboration Seeks to Stem TASS
    Nurses' Pay Increased in 2011, Says AORN
    Interactive Interviewing Provides Insightful Information
    InstaPoll: One Nurse, One Patient
    News & Notes