AI Article Synopsis

  • The project aimed to reduce lost operating room (OR) time caused by last-minute surgery cancellations, which can be costly and distressing for families.
  • Key strategies included improving communication with families, ensuring adherence to fasting rules, and making decisions regarding patient health ahead of the surgery day.
  • After implementing effective preoperative instructions and reminders, the average time lost due to cancellations significantly decreased from 5.7 to 3.6 hours and overall from 6.6 to 5.5 hours per day across all surgical services.

Article Abstract

Background And Objectives: Cancelation on the day of surgery (DoSC) represents a costly wastage of operating room (OR) time and causes inconvenience, emotional distress, and financial cost to families. A quality improvement project sought to reduce lost OR time due to cancelation.

Methods: Key drivers of the process included effective 2-way communication with families, compliance with fasting rules, and decision-making on patient illness before the day of surgery. A multidisciplinary team conducted serial tests of change addressing the various key drivers. Interventions were simplified, colorful, personalized preoperative instruction sheets and text-message reminders to caregivers' cellphones, as well as a defined institutional decision-making pathway to permit rescheduling before the day of surgery in case of patient illness concerns. After initial smaller-scale testing, the interventions were implemented across all patients and sites. Data were collected from the hospital information technology system and analyzed by using control charts and statistical process control methods.

Results: Mean OR time lost due to DoSC was decreased from a baseline of 5.7 to 3.6 hours/day in testing with a subset of surgical services at the hospital's base campus, and then from 6.6 hours to 5.5 hours/day when implemented across all services at both surgical sites.

Conclusions: By applying quality improvement methods, significant reductions were made in time lost due to DoSC. The impact can be significant by improving institutional resource utilization.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2014-2418DOI Listing

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