Why we are wasting time in the operating theatre?
β Scribed by Prithwiraj Saha; Anita Pinjani; Nawar Al-Shabibi; Sheethal Madari; John Ruston; Adam Magos
- Book ID
- 102253903
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 107 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0749-6753
- DOI
- 10.1002/hpm.966
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Objectives To determine reasons for delay during elective operating lists and suggest solutions.
Design Prospective observational study.
Setting A large underβgraduate teaching hospital.
Participants Fiftyβfive consecutive women undergoing elective gynaecological surgery under general anaesthesia.
Interventions Every time point of individual patient's passage through the operating theatre (patients sent for, arrival in the anaesthetic room, general anaesthetic commenced, transfer to the operating theatre, surgery started, surgery completed, anaesthetic reversed, patient taken to recovery area) was documented.
Main outcome measures Time intervals between the various time points with particular reference to wait by the anaesthetist and surgeon between cases.
Results We monitored 55 operations carried out during 22 operating lists. Apart from the surgery itself (median 81βmin per procedure), the longest interval was the time taken to get patients into the anaesthetic room from the ward (median 20βmin). Although patients waited a median of 10βmin before the start of anaesthesia, if the first procedure on the list was excluded, the anaesthetist was waiting for the patient to arrive in the anaesthetic room in 13/30 (43%) cases, wasting a median of 7βmin per case. The surgeon had to wait a median of 22.5βmin between operations.
Conclusions Considerable operating theatre time is wasted while patients are transferred to and from the operating theatre resulting in both anaesthetists and surgeons having to wait between patients in a high proportion of cases, averaging 1βh during a 4βh operating list. Surgery could be made more time efficient by ensuring that patients arrive in the operating theatre complex early enough (to reduce time wasted for anaesthetists and surgeons), and by having two anaesthetists available at the end of surgery, one to reverse the anaesthetic while the other starts the next induction (to reduce time waste for the surgeon), coupled to adequate recovery area capacity. Copyright Β© 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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