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Chapter 02: Patient Safety and Risk Management
Rothrock: Alexanderโs Care of the Patient in Surgery, 16th Edition
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Governmental and professional agencies and organizations, whether voluntary or
involuntary, have a significant influence on patient safety policies in the healthcare setting.
Select the agency or organization statement that presents a true reflection of its focus or
purpose.
a. The Joint Commission (TJC): Nonvoluntary bureau that tests healthcare
institutions against evidence-based elements of performance
b. Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP): Trends surgical site infection statistics
c. American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA): Professional organization of
anesthesia providers and technologists
d. World Health Organization (WHO): United Nations (UN)โbased and supported
authority on health throughout most of the world
ANS: D
The UN created WHO to function as its health oversight and coordination authority for all
UN member nations who in turn have joined WHO. In 2004, WHO launched the World
Alliance on Patient Safety, by which it began to examine patient safety in acute as well as
in primary care settings relevant to all WHO member nations. WHO was created by and
functions within the UN as the directing and coordinating authority for health throughout
UN member nations.
2. Since its organization and establishment as a professional nursing association in the early
1950s, the Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN) continues its endeavor
to:
a. promote guidelines influencing patient safety.
b. create professional operating room (OR) nursing care delivery models.
c. interpret healthcare statistics critical to perioperative nursing care.
d. ensure risk reduction strategies are the foundation of perioperative education.
ANS: A
AORN provides an array of standards, recommended practices (RPs), guidelines,
publications, videos, and tool kits that specifically address patient safety from the
perioperative teamโs point of view.
3. A healthy 32-year-old nursing student is scheduled for excision of a left-sided subglottal
cyst with frozen section and possible radical neck dissection. The preoperative verification
process provides the opportunity to collect and verify information about the patient to
ensure patient safety. Among the patient data that must be verified are:
a. emergency contact name.
b. laboratory and imaging results.
c. advance directive on file.
d. immunization records.
ANS: B
Preprocedure verification process ensures that all relevant documents (e.g., the history
and physical examination, surgical consent, required laboratory studies) and imaging
studies (properly labeled and displayed) are available before the start of the procedure.
Preprocedure verification is best conducted when the patient can be involved and should
be completed before the patient leaves the preprocedure area.
4. A patient was positioned, prepped, and draped following general endotracheal anesthesia
induction. The team assembled to perform the time-out as described in the WHO surgical
checklist. Successful employment of the time-out can only be ensured when:
a. the time-out is initiated by the surgeon.
b. each member of the team has an equal role and voice.
c. perioperative services have a physician champion and surgeon buy-in.
d. the checklist is committed to memory by all team members.
ANS: B
All members of the team must introduce themselves by name and role and participate in
sharing critical elements of care. The team includes the surgeon, anesthesia provider, and
nursing staff, plus any allied or ancillary care providers contributing to the procedure when
the time-out is performed.
5. When unexpected events occur that have, or could have, compromised patient safety, a
systematic investigatory process takes place. Significant information is gained through this
meticulous exploration. The primary motive for carrying out a root cause analysis is to:
a. establish cause and trends based on who was involved.
b. determine precisely what happened and why.
c. find out what needs to take place to prevent a recurrence of the event.
d. uncover factors that contributed to the environment and the event.
ANS: C
Root cause analysis is a systematized process to identify variations in performance that
cause, or could cause, a sentinel event. The analysis phase of root cause analysis
progresses from โwhyโ questions to โwhat can be done to prevent thisโ questions that flow
and ultimately result in an action plan. Root cause analysis concentrates on systems and
processes, not individuals.
6. The Joint Commission (TJC) designates sentinel events as unexpected occurrences
involving death or risk of serious physical or psychologic injury. In 2003, TJC mandated
the Universal Protocol to address perioperative sentinel events. This protocol includes:
a. improving the safety of using medications.
b. reporting critical results of tests in a timely manner.
c. performing a preprocedure verification process.
d. establishing alarm system safety as a priority.
ANS: C
Preprocedure verification process ensures that all relevant documents (e.g., the history and
physical examination, surgical consent, required laboratory studies) and imaging studies
(properly labeled and displayed) are available before the start of the procedure.
Preprocedure verification is best conducted when the patient and/or guardian can be
involved and should be complete before the patient leaves the preprocedure area. The
surgical team must agree that this is the correct patient and the planned procedure on the
specified side and site. The preprocedure verification process also includes confirming
availability of necessary equipment, implants and prostheses, which is reconfirmed during
the time-out.
7. A patient was transferred to the postanesthesia care unit (PACU) by the anesthesia
provider and perioperative nurse. A hand-off report was given, using situation,
background, assessment, recommendation (SBAR) format, to the accepting PACU nurse.
The first element of information that should be presented in the hand-off report is:
a. the expected discharge criteria.
b. the names and roles of the nurse and anesthesia provider.
c. patient identification and procedure performed.
d. pain management orders.
ANS: C
All patient encounters should begin with patient identification verification. The receiving
healthcare provider bears the responsibility for obtaining all of the information needed to
safely care for the patient before the transferring staff leaves the area. Time for
clarification and questioning must be provided. The purpose of hand-off communication
and reports is to provide essential, up-to-date, and specific information about the patient.
Standardized hand-off communication must include an opportunity to ask and respond to
questions.
8. The OR is a danger-prone area for both patients and staff. Providing a safe environment of
care for the patient involves identifying, mitigating, and managing the hazards inherent in
surgical care. Choose the answer below that completes the blanks in this sentence: the risk
of the surgical hazard of _________________ can be mitigated through
_______________________.
a. wrong patient, wrong site, and wrong side surgery; site marking and presurgical
checklists
b. electrical and thermal burns; alcohol-free prep solution
c. surgical site infection; flash sterilization
d. surgical airway fire; fire extinguishers in every OR
ANS: A
Evidence shows that wrong site surgery not only can devastate the patient and family but
also can impact the perioperative team adversely. All institutions accredited by TJC must
follow the Universal Protocol for Preventing Wrong Site, Wrong Procedure, Wrong
Person Surgery. The surgical team must agree that this is the correct patient and that the
planned procedure is on the specified side and site. Marking the surgical site must be done
so that the intended site of incision or insertion is clear and unambiguous.
9. Laparoscopic procedures that emergently convert to open procedures place the patient at
risk for unintentional retained surgical items (RSIs). What new and evolving risk reduction
strategy could prevent RSIs and frustrating, time-consuming miscount adventures at the
end of these procedures?
a. Creating precounted laparotomy sets with only the few necessary instruments
b. Performing radiologic surveillance on all conversion procedures at closure
c. Counting all instruments including a laparotomy set before the laparoscopy
d. Replacing or tagging sponges and laparotomy instruments with radiofrequency
identification (RFID) chips
ANS: D
New sponge-tracking technologies have emerged that enhance risk reduction strategies to
prevent inadvertent retention of retained surgical items (RSIs). These include sequentially
numbered sponges, bar coding, and RFID products. Researchers suggest that, given
medical and liability costs of more than $200,000 per incident, sponge tracking
technologies can substantially reduce the incidence of retained surgical sponges at an
acceptable cost. At a minimum, all facilities should have a โcountโ policy that reflects
AORNโs Recommended Practices for Sponge, Sharp, and Instrument Counts.
10. Demands of the perioperative environment impact how staff dispense and administer
medications. Safe perioperative medication practices include:
a. optimizing use of automated dispensing cabinets to obtain medications for multiple
patients at one time.
b. retrieving medications well ahead of a planned use to prevent delays.
c. preloading syringes to improve efficiency.
d. transferring medications to the sterile field without distractions and one medication
at a time.
ANS: D
AORNโs recommended practices for medication safety include obtaining medications for
only one patient at a time, obtaining and preparing medications as close as possible to time
of use, eliminating distractions, and transferring medications to the sterile field one
medication at a time.
11. Fires and explosions in the perioperative setting require three components, described as
the โfire triangle.โ The element of the triangle the perioperative nurse has the most control
over is:
a. the ignition sources.
b. the fuel.
c. the oxidizer.
d. static electricity.
ANS: B
Perioperative nurses have influence over fuel sources such as drapes and prep solutions.
They should work to ensure that an ignition source does not come in contact with a fuel
source through interventions such ensuring prep solution is dry before the surgeon
activates the electrosurgical device.
12. Surgical patients are at risk for development of pressure injuries due to extrinsic factors
such as length of surgery and intrinsic factors such as co-morbidities and age. The most
important factor in prevention of such pressure injuries is:
a.
b.
c.
d.
use of a transfer sheet to decrease friction.
use of sheets or blankets to position patients.
completion of a preoperative risk assessment and skin assessment.
reviewing the guidelines for patient positioning in surgery.
ANS: C
Completion of a risk assessment and skin assessment allows the team to plan appropriate
preventive interventions. Sheets or blankets should not be used as they decrease the
effectiveness of support surfaces.
13. Informed consent is both a requirement and a patient right. The perioperative nurseโs
responsibility in terms of informed consent is to:
a. ensure the consent is completed properly to prevent legal liability.
b. report to the physician any doubts or concerns regarding the patients
understanding.
c. obtain the informed consent.
d. answer questions related to risks and benefits.
ANS: B
The perioperative nurseโs role as a patient advocate means the nurse has a responsibility
for identifying and addressing expressed fears and determining the patientโs ability to
understand. The informed consent process does not prevent legal liability if adverse events
occur. The perioperative nurse is not responsible for obtaining the informed consent but is
responsible for verifying the consent is correct and complete.
14. Which of the following situations requires informed consent from the patient/family?
a. Emergent surgery
b. Organ procurement
c. Starting an IV
d. Discharge to home
ANS: B
Except in emergencies, surgical procedures should not be performed without
documentation of the patientโs consent on the chart. The patient also must be informed
who will perform the procedure and when practitioners other than the primary surgeon
will perform important parts of the procedure, even when under the primary surgeonโs
supervision.
15. Proper care and handling of surgical specimens is imperative for correct diagnosis,
treatment, and prognosis planning of the patient. Select the response that best reflects
correct specimen care and handling.
a. Label consecutive specimens in alphabetical order for laboratory efficiency.
b. Send all specimens to the laboratory together as one pickup, including frozen
sections.
c. Avoid placing specimens for frozen section in formalin.
d. Neutralize formalin/formaldehyde spills with glycerin sulfate, and call the hazmat
team.
ANS: C
Specimens for frozen section should be sent fresh (e.g., without fixatives
[formalin/formaldehyde]). Specimens for frozen section usually are placed on a nonstick
pad or into a dry specimen container. They are never placed in saline solution or formalin,
nor are they ever transported on a counted sponge. They should be sent immediately to the
laboratory. Formalin, a combination of methanol, water, and formaldehyde, is frequently
used to preserve specimens if they are not taken to the laboratory immediately.
16. Proper handling of specimens is crucial for patient safety. What is the most serious
negative outcome that could occur as a result of the loss, mislabeling or mishandling of a
surgical specimen?
a. The medical facility could be sued for negligence.
b. The patient might be unsatisfied with the treatment received.
c. The patientโs condition could be misdiagnosed.
d. The medical facilityโs reputation could be damaged.
ANS: C
A mislabeled specimen may result in misdiagnosis and consequently inappropriate
treatment of the patient. Communication errors pose significant risks to patients in the
misidentification of a surgical specimen before its arrival in the pathology laboratory.
17. During a simulation on intraoperative counts in which peer โteamsโ competed, Team 2
was determined to have demonstrated best practice in performing surgical counts. This
team, whose members included a RN, CNOR, and CST, reviewed the unit practice
standard and current AORN evidence-based guidelines. Select the appropriate order of
counts that they demonstrated to their peers.
a. The CST counted the back table, Mayo stand, and sterile field, while the RN
counted the sponge bags and the items in the kick bucket.
b. The RN and CST counted aloud together as RN pointed to the sponges in the
sponge bag and then as the CST touched each sponge, moving from back table to
Mayo stand to sterile field.
c. The RN and the CST each counted aloud as the CST pointed to items on the floor
and kick bucket, and back table. To expedite the count, the RN counted aloud as
she pointed out the sponges in the sponge bag while the CST completed the back
table.
d. The surgeon searched the wound as the RN and the CST counted the floor, sponge
bag, kick bucket, back table, Mayo stand, sterile field, and the sponge wrapped
around the new ostomy.
ANS: B
As the first layer of closure begins, the scrub person and circulating nurse count all items
consecutively in a standardized routine (e.g., proceeding from the sterile field to the Mayo
stand to the back table and then off the field, or vice versa). The count is done audibly,
visibly, and concurrently.
18. As the placenta was delivered and the uterus prepared for closure, the scrub person
gathered up all of the sponges and dropped them in the kick bucket while the circulating
nurse frantically stuffed them into sponge bag pockets. Sharps, sponges, and instrument
counts were correct on closure of the uterus and again on closure of the peritoneum. On
final sharps and sponge counts before skin closure, a needle was missing. Select the
appropriate order of corrective action for the team.
a. Count and verify suture packs, dump and count packs in sterile suture bag, check
floor, check back table and Mayo stand, notify surgeon, and check linen and clean
and red trash bags. Open clean trash bags tied up in the corner from sterile table
setup.
b. Recalculate numbers on whiteboard, check back table and Mayo stand, dump and
check linen and trash, verify suture packs, notify team of possible missing needle.
c. Notify team of needle discrepancy; recount needles on and off sterile field and
whiteboard; check sterile field, Mayo stand, and back table; check floor, under OR
table, bottoms of shoes, pantsโ cuffs, and sterile sleeve cuffs; check sponge bags
and kick bucket.
d. Recount needles on and off sterile field, check sterile field and Mayo stand and
back table; check floor, wait to notify team until miscount verified; check red bag
trash, compare empty suture packs, total number on whiteboard.
ANS: C
All incorrect closure counts should be reported immediately, and attempts made to resolve
every discrepancy. If the count remains unresolved, the circulating nurse again notifies the
surgeon of the unresolved count. A search of the surgical wound, field, floor, linen, and
trash is made for the missing item (thus, the rationale that linen and trash not leave the OR
until the end of the procedure). All personnel direct their immediate attention to locating
the missing item.
19. Early on, during the preliminary sponge count on closure of a repair of a ruptured
abdominal aortic aneurysm, the circulating nurse was unable to account for 2 lap sponges.
He had maintained accountability for all sponges and instruments discarded from the
sterile field and bagged each sponge carefully. He immediately turned and addressed the
entire team in a clear voice. Select the appropriate communication that the circulating
nurse must employ during this count discrepancy.
a. โStop everything. Iโm missing a couple of sponges. They are not in the trash or
back table. Check the wound.โ
b. โI think you are missing 2 sponges. Shall I call X-ray while the scrub person
checks her table again? Doctor, please check the incision.โ
c. โWe have a count discrepancy. We started with 70 sponges and find only 68. We
are missing 2 lap sponges. Everyone, please check your areas.
d. โIโve called X-ray because we are short 2 sponges. Iโve called the charge nurse to
get someone to help me check the trash and linen.โ
ANS: C
Note that the circulating nurse used SBAR format to alert the team of the critical situation.
All incorrect closure counts should be reported immediately and attempts made to resolve
every discrepancy. If the count remains unresolved, the circulating nurse again notifies the
surgeon of the unresolved count. A search of the surgical wound, field, floor, linen, and
trash is made for the missing item (thus, the rationale that linen and trash not leave the OR
until the end of the procedure). All personnel direct their immediate attention to locating
the missing item. If it is not found, an X-ray film may be taken and read by the radiologist
or surgeon as specified in institutional policy.
20. A patient was presented with the prepared informed consent form during the discussion
with her surgeon concerning her scheduled vaginal-assisted laparoscopic hysterectomy.
She demonstrated and verbalized that she understood the procedure, risks, expected
outcome, complications, and procedural process. Before she signed the consent form, she
informed the surgeon that she did not want any medical students or surgical residents
performing any parts of the procedure other than assisting and did not want any
photographs of her body taken. The surgeon agreed, and she crossed out those portions of
the form and initialed them before she signed. The patient was exercising her:
a. understanding and rights under the Patient Self-Determination Act (PSDA).
b. right to informed consent.
c. autonomy to protect herself from negligence and malpractice.
d. hope that everyone would honor the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA).
ANS: B
Every adult has the right to determine what happens to his or her body. In perioperative
practice settings, these rights are protected via informed consent processes for the
procedure itself and/or for any research interventions, and via patient wishes expressed in
advance directives for healthcare. The patient also must be informed who will perform the
procedure and when practitioners other than the primary surgeon will perform important
parts of the procedure, even when under the primary surgeonโs supervision.
21. A female patient with end-stage pancreatic cancer was admitted from hospice for a celiac
plexus block to treat intractable pain. She wanted to be able to complete โgetting her
things in orderโ and saying good-bye to her friends and family while enjoying her last
days pain-free. The patient insisted that her Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) status NOT be
rescinded. She was conscious and competent and knew what was best for herself. The
patient was taking full advantage of what provision for her care?
a. PSDA
b. Advance directives
c. Informed consent
d. PSDA and advance directives
ANS: D
Many individual states had statutes that allowed patients to dictate their future healthcare
wishes in a legally recognized fashion if they were unable to do so when a life-threatening
situation arose. Then, in the wake of the first U.S. Supreme Court case to deal with the
issueโCruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health, 497 U.S. 261 (1990)โthe
U.S. Congress in 1991 passed the PSDA to extend legal protection to all U.S. citizens and
residents. Under the Act, patients have the legal right to accept or refuse medical
treatment, including resuscitation, even if refusal will likely result in death.
22. Researchers in the area of patient safety have proposed an emphasis on transparent
systems, asserting that adverse patient events cannot be effectively prevented until the
legal and professional licensure systems discontinue their focus on individual error and
blame. In order for a transparent system to exist and thrive, it requires:
a. human factor reliance.
b. confidentiality.
c. open reporting.
d. disciplinary guidelines.
ANS: C
They urged an emphasis on transparent systems that required open reporting,
investigation, innovation, and dissemination. The aviation and nuclear systemsโ parallel
examination of human factors served as models for ideas that led to relative success in
preventing injury attributable to human error.
23. A key factor in promoting patient safety is:
a. emphasis on individual responsibility.
b. elimination of distractions and noise from the perioperative environments.
c. standardized checklists.
d. continuous monitoring.
ANS: C
Using surgical safety checklists is most important in promoting patient safety. Data
suggests that checklist use may also improve adherence to lifesaving processes during OR
patient crises such as cardiac arrest and massive hemorrhage. Studies confirm tangible
improvements in safety outcomes after implementation of a checklist and found a nearly
75% reduction in failure to adhere to critical steps in management of a simulated surgical
crisis.
24. Which nonprofit organization improves patient care through applied research into
effectiveness and safety of devices, drugs, procedures, and processes?
a. The Joint Commission (TJC)
b. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
c. Consumers Advancing Patient Safety (CAPS)
d. Emergency Care Research Institute (ECRI)
ANS: D
ECRI is a nonprofit organization dedicated to using the discipline of applied scientific
research to discover which medical procedures, devices, drugs, and processes, including
fire safety, best improve patient care.
MULTIPLE RESPONSE
1. In the perioperative environment, patient hand offs occur at multiple points during the
continuum of care. Best practices for patient hand offs include: (Select all that apply.)
a. completing urgent tasks before beginning the hand-over process.
b. tailoring communication steps as needed to manage efficiency.
c. using a structured tool to facilitate consistency.
d. using a broad definition for hand offs.
e. integrating technology into the hand-off process.
ANS: A, C, D, E
The Joint Commissionโs attributes of effective hand offs include establishing a setting that
limits interruptions, use of a standardized process or tools, verification of received
information, and integration of technologies into all hand-off processes. Deviating from
established procedures to accommodate time constraints may cause unnecessary risk to
patients.
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