Changes in safety attitude and relationship to decreased postoperative morbidity and mortality following implementation of a checklist-based surgical safety intervention

Alex B. Haynes(Harvard University), Thomas G. Weiser(Harvard University Press), William R. Berry(Harvard University Press), Stuart R. Lipsitz(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Abdel-Hadi Breizat(Ministry of Health), E. Patchen Dellinger(University of Washington), Gerald Dziekan(World Health Organization - Pakistan), Teodoro Herbosa(University of the Philippines Manila), Pascience Kibatala(Saint Francis University), Marie Carmela Lapitan(University of the Philippines Manila), Alan Merry(University of Auckland), Richard K. Reznick(University Health Network), Bruce Taylor(University Health Network), Amit Vats(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Atul A. Gawande(Harvard University), for the Safe Surgery Saves Lives Study Group
BMJ Quality & Safety
January 1, 2011
Cited by 526Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To assess the relationship between changes in clinician attitude and changes in postoperative outcomes following a checklist-based surgical safety intervention. DESIGN: Pre- and post intervention survey. SETTING: Eight hospitals participating in a trial of a WHO surgical safety checklist. PARTICIPANTS: Clinicians actively working in the designated study operating rooms at the eight hospitals. SURVEY INSTRUMENT: Modified operating-room version Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Change in mean safety attitude score and correlation between change in safety attitude score and change in postoperative outcomes, plus clinician opinion of checklist efficacy and usability. RESULTS: Clinicians in the preintervention phase (n=281) had a mean SAQ score of 3.91 (on a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 representing better safety attitude), while the postintervention group (n=257) had a mean of 4.01 (p=0.0127). The degree of improvement in mean SAQ score at each site correlated with a reduction in postoperative complication rate (r=0.7143, p=0.0381). The checklist was considered easy to use by 80.2% of respondents, while 19.8% felt that it took a long time to complete, and 78.6% felt that the programme prevented errors. Overall, 93.4% would want the checklist used if they were undergoing operation. CONCLUSIONS: Improvements in postoperative outcomes were associated with improved perception of teamwork and safety climate among respondents, suggesting that changes in these may be partially responsible for the effect of the checklist. Clinicians held the checklist in high regard and the overwhelming majority would want it used if they were undergoing surgery themselves.


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