The ritualisation of the surgical safety checklist and its decoupling from patient safety goals

Author:

Facey Marcia12ORCID,Baxter Nancy2345,Hammond Mobilio Melanie56,Moulton Carol‐anne456,Paradis Elise16

Affiliation:

1. Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

2. Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute St Michael's Hospital Unity Health Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Melbourne School of Population and Global Health The University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. Department of Surgery University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

5. Institute of Health Policy, Management, and Evaluation University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

6. The Wilson Centre University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractPatient harm, patient safety and their governance have been ongoing concerns for policymakers, care providers and the public. In response to high rates of adverse events/medical errors, the World Health Organisation (WHO) advocated the use of surgical safety checklists (SSC) to improve safety in surgical care. Canadian health authorities subsequently made SSC use a mandatory organisational practice, with public reporting of safety indicators for compliance tied to pre‐existing legislation and to reimbursements for surgical procedures. Perceived as the antidote for socio‐technical issues in operating rooms (ORs), much of the SSC‐related research has focused on assessing clinical and economic effectiveness, worker perceptions, attitudes and barriers to implementation. Suboptimal outcomes are attributed to implementations that ignored contexts. Using ethnographic data from a study of SSC at an urban teaching hospital (C&C), a critical lens and the concepts of ritual and ceremony, we examine how it is used, and theorise the nature and implications of that use. Two rituals, one improvised and one scripted, comprised C&C’s SSC ceremony. Improvised performances produced dislocations that were ameliorated by scripted verification practices. This ceremony produced causally opaque links to patient safety goals and reproduced OR/medical culture. We discuss the theoretical contributions of the study and the implications for patient safety.

Funder

Physicians' Services Incorporated Foundation

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Health (social science)

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