Hospital-acquired pressure injuries create a tremendous cost to health care organizations and negatively affect quality and patient safety. Surgical patients are at an increased risk for skin injury, particularly a pressure injury, because of a lack of sensation and immobility during a procedure. An interprofessional team at our facility identified factors that place surgical patients at risk for skin injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWomen who wake from sleep during sexual assault commonly report confusion and disorientation. Confusion and disorientation, with impaired decision making after waking, are symptoms of 'sleep inertia', and part of the normal transition from sleep to full wakefulness which is maximal in the minutes after wakening and can be prolonged. In this study of 305 adult females (median age 26, range 18-68), who presented for a sexual assault forensic medical examination, 38 (12%) (median age 27, range 18-51) woke to find sexual acts already in progress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth care organization leaders can help prevent surgical errors by ensuring compliance with standardized preprocedure time outs that require the active participation and engagement of the entire surgical team. Some surgical department leaders have used remote video observation without audio to monitor compliance with the time out. After a sentinel event occurred, leaders at our large academic medical center initiated a quality improvement project to audit compliance with the standardized preprocedure time out.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurgical smoke is a hazardous byproduct of any surgery involving a laser or an electrosurgical unit. Although research and professional organizations identified surgical smoke as harmful many years ago, this byproduct continues to be a safety hazard in the OR. An interdisciplinary team at a large academic medical center sought to address the exposure of patients and perioperative team members to surgical smoke.
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