Wrong Site Surgery WSS (and wrong site procedures: wrong site anaesthetic, implement fitting, etc) might not be as uncommon as you think. Here is an insight into the problem.
Surgeon, standing to the right of a patient under general anaesthesia for hernia repair asks: ‘which side is the hernia?’
Assisting surgeon: ‘I don’t know. I did not see the patient.’
Surgeon: ‘Who saw the patient?’
Assisting Surgeon: ‘The house surgeon from the previous shift’
Surgeon: ‘What does it say in the notes and consent?’
Assisting Surgeon: ‘Hernia repair, obviously’
Surgeon in anger: ‘Obviously!! But which bloody side?’
There were a large group of people in that operating theatre, junior nurses, medical students and other staff. None of them will speak to the chief unless they are spoken to. Silence for a few moments.
Surgeon in exasperation: ‘Does anybody know the side?’
Medical Student puts her hand up.
Surgeon very impatiently: ‘Tell us. What are you waiting for?’
Medical student says: ‘I don’t know for sure, but I was standing on the right of the patient’s bed when I examined him and I had to reach out across to feel the hernia. So it must be the left side.’
Surgeon: ‘Left it is then. Let us get this done’
Very lucky day. The patient did have a left hernia. The medical students had seen two other hernia pre-op patients the same day and extremely fortunately they were all left groin hernia.
Wrong Site Surgery WSS
(and wrong site procedures: wrong site anaesthetic, implement fitting, etc)
Sadly not all patients have lucky days like the above patient.
- Wrong site surgery happens 40 times a week in the USA. http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2011-06-20/national/35235752_1_wrong-site-surgery-wrong-site-surgery-universal-protocol
- Wrong site surgery is estimated to happen once a year in a typical hospital with 300 beds Clarke, J.R., Johnston, J., and Finley, E.D. Getting surgery right. Annals of Surgery;246(3):395-405, Sept. 2007. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1959354/pdf/20070900s00006p395.pdf
- Surgeons have a 1 in 4 chance (i.e a very high chance) of being involved in a wrong site incident
Please provide doctors with a skin marker pen as a part of the various complimentary items that you provide and ask the doctors to use them to mark the surgical incision site EveryonePlease forward the link for this blog to at least two persons. Alternatively cut and paste and send the information to at least two persons.
Write to hospitals, politicians, news media outlets or any other action that spreads the message.
Let this be a campaign be owned by us the normal public (such campaigns are normally lead by institutions/organisations/etc)
Primum non nocere is a fundamental principle of medical practise. Causing permanent harm by wrong site surgery is against that principle. It may not have happened to you yet but look at the numbers it is happening all over the world, it may happen to you unless you take definite action about it; irrespective of whether you are a healthcare professional or general public.
About the Author : Dr Makani Hemadri MBBS (Madras) FRCS (Edin) MBA (Leics) works in general surgery in the NHS in England. He is a Fellow of the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement; during his fellowship year in 2009 he had the opportunity to interact and learn from the best sources in healthcare improvement such as Intermountain Healthcare and IHI in the USA and Kings Fund in UK. He has held the Leaders for Change Award 2008 from the Health Foundation UK. He is actively engaged in the teaching and training of healthcare delivery improvement.Hemadri blogs in his personal capacity at http://successinhealthcare.blogspot.co.uk/ He can be followed on twitter @HemadriTweets Image Courtesy : Robot Surgery shirt startup weekend dallas sarah worthy – Licensed under Attribution-ShareAlike. Editor’s Note: This is a guest post and the views expressed in the article are solely that of the author. The incidents about patient experiences stated in this blog are highly fictionalised and any resemblance to any person(living or dead)and/or incident is purely co-incidental.
