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1.
J Perianesth Nurs ; 39(1): 10-15, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37855761

RESUMO

Adverse surgical events cause negative patient health outcomes and harm that can often overshadow the safe and effective patient care provided daily by nurses as members of interprofessional healthcare teams. Near misses occur far more frequently than adverse events and are less visible to nurse leaders because patient harm is avoided due to chance, prevention, or mitigation. However, near misses have comparable root causes to adverse events and exhibit the same underlying patterns of failure. Reviewing near misses provides nurses with learning opportunities to identify patient care weaknesses and build appropriate solutions to enhance care. As the operating room is one of the most complex work settings in healthcare, identifying potential weaknesses or sources for errors is vital to reduce healthcare-associated risks for patients and staff. The purpose of this manuscript is to educate, inform, and stimulate critical thinking by discussing perioperative near miss case studies and the underlying factors that lead to errors. Our authors discuss 15 near miss case studies occurring across the perioperative patient experience of care and discuss barriers to near miss reporting. Nurse leaders can use our case studies to stimulate discussion among perioperative and perianesthesia nurses in their hospitals to inform comprehensive risk reduction programs.


Assuntos
Near Miss , Gestão de Riscos , Humanos , Segurança do Paciente , Salas Cirúrgicas , Acidentes , Erros Médicos/prevenção & controle
2.
Mil Med ; 189(Suppl 1): 24-30, 2023 11 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37956334

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: To reach the highest levels of health care quality, all nurses providing intraoperative care to surgical patients should have a firm grasp of the complex knowledge, skills, and guidelines undergirding the perioperative nursing profession. In military treatment facilities, either perioperative registered nurses or labor and delivery (L&D) nurses provide skilled intraoperative nursing care for cesarean deliveries. However, L&D and perioperative nurses occupy vastly different roles in the continuum of care and may possess widely differing levels of surgical training and experience. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The purpose of this project was to improve surgical care quality by standardizing and strengthening L&D nurse perioperative training, knowledge, and competence. Our population, intervention, comparative, and outcome question was, "For labor and delivery nurses of a regional military medical center (P), does implementing an evidence-based training program (I), as compared to current institutional nursing practices (C), increase nursing knowledge and perioperative nursing competence (O)?" We implemented Periop 101: A Core Curriculum-Cesarean Section training for 17 L&D nurses, measured knowledge using product-provided testing, and assessed competence using the Perceived Perioperative Competence Scale-Revised. RESULTS: We found that perioperative nursing knowledge and competence significantly improved and were less varied among the nurses after completing the training program. Nurses demonstrated the greatest knowledge area improvements in scrubbing, gowning, and gloving; wound healing; and sterilization and disinfection, for which median scores improved by more than 100%. Nurses reported significantly greater perceived competence across all six domains of the Perioperative Competence Scale-Revised, with the largest improvements realized in foundational skills and knowledge, leadership, and proficiency. CONCLUSIONS: We recommend that health care leaders develop policies to standardize perioperative education, training, and utilization for nurses providing intraoperative care to reduce clinician role ambiguity, decrease inefficiencies, and enhance care.


Assuntos
Cesárea , Enfermagem Perioperatória , Humanos , Gravidez , Feminino , Enfermagem Perioperatória/educação , Competência Clínica , Currículo , Qualidade da Assistência à Saúde
3.
J Perianesth Nurs ; 37(3): 298-307, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35339386

RESUMO

Nursing has a long and celebrated history of providing life-saving care during crises and periods of great need. Following the government collapse in Afghanistan and the withdrawal of US troops, a severe humanitarian and human rights crisis emerged. The US military participated in one of the largest and most complex humanitarian missions in history to aid Afghan relief efforts. US and coalition forces evacuated more than 130,000 people in the chaotic Allied airlift from the Kabul Airport. The overarching missions, Operation Allies Refuge and Operation Allies Welcome, provided humanitarian support to at-risk Afghan nationals who contributed to the Global War on Terrorism efforts, as well as US citizens living in Afghanistan. Landstuhl Regional Medical Center (LRMC), an overseas military treatment facility located in Germany, supported the healthcare needs of Afghan evacuees and injured US service members during the humanitarian crisis. LRMC clinicians provided emergent, urgent, and specialty care while advocating for evacuee health, wellness, and living conditions. Perioperative and perianesthesia nurses were essential to the humanitarian response, as many evacuees and injured US service members arrived in Germany requiring immediate surgical interventions. In this article, we describe the vital contributions of military perioperative and perianesthesia nurses to the Operation Allies Refuge and Operation Allies Welcome missions, and share our experiences providing humanitarian relief. Military and civilian healthcare planners can learn from our humanitarian relief contributions, experiences, and lessons to strategically prepare their health systems to respond to future crises.


Assuntos
Militares , Humanos , Enfermagem Perioperatória
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