Suture material use and procurement: an audit of a public hospital surgical system in Gauteng, South Africa
S. Afr. j. surg. (Online)
; 56(2): 45-49, 2018. tab
Article
in En
| AIM
| ID: biblio-1271015
Responsible library:
CG1.1
ABSTRACT
Introduction:
Surgical systems are integral to successful, safe and cost effective clinical practice and must balance surgical demands on consumable items and their costs. Suture material is a key consumable resource, and was evaluated in an audit of consumable use and cost as well as the procurement systems within the South African Gauteng public health care sector.Aims:
To determine suture use and cost in the four commonest general surgical procedures abdominal wall closure, mastectomy, appendicectomy and inguinal hernia repair in three academic Gauteng hospitals. Performance and availability were evaluated as a secondary aim in suture material use.Methods:
A prospective observational study. Suture use was documented by the surgeon at the time of the procedure and qualitative investigation at relevant hospital departments determined suture material procurement and expenditure.Results:
The surgeons in three facilities documented consistent material type and average number of units used; however, in some cases there was a lack of availability of appropriate material and breakage of generic material intraoperatively. There is no consistent and consolidated electronic record-keeping of suture stock and cost in all three hospitals, therefore cost of suture material used was not obtainable.Conclusion:
Clinical deficiencies in availability and quality of material may have adverse implications for patient health, healthcare costs and budgets through procedure-related complications and should be investigated. There is a lack of communication between the financial management, procurement officers, hospital and theatre stores and theatre staff. It is suggested that clinical protocols and system-based strategies be put in place to manage surgical consumables
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Database:
AIM
Main subject:
Patients
/
South Africa
/
Surgical Procedures, Operative
Type of study:
Guideline
/
Observational_studies
/
Qualitative_research
Country/Region as subject:
Africa
Language:
En
Journal:
S Afr J Surg
/
S. Afr. j. surg. (Online)
/
South African journal of surgery
/
South African journal of surgery (Online)
Year:
2018
Document type:
Article