Addressing knowledge gaps in Surgical Safety Checklist use: statistical process control analysis of a surgical quality improvement programme in Ethiopia

Author:

Nofal Maia R1234ORCID,Starr Nichole345ORCID,Negussie Mammo Tihitena46,Trickey Amber W2ORCID,Gebeyehu Natnael45,Koritsanszky Luca7,Alemu Mechale8,Tara Mansi4,Alemu Senait Bitew4,Evans Faye4910,Kahsay Selam4,Weiser Thomas G24

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Boston Medical Center, Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

2. Department of Surgery, Stanford University , Palo Alto, California , USA

3. Fogarty International Center, Global Health Equity Scholars Program (D43TW010540) , Washington, D.C. , USA

4. Lifebox Foundation , Addis Ababa , Ethiopia

5. Department of Surgery, University of California San Francisco , San Francisco, California , USA

6. Department of Surgery, Addis Ababa University , Addis Ababa , Ethiopia

7. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Boston Medical Center, Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

8. Department of Surgery, Zewditu Memorial Hospital , Addis Ababa , Ethiopia

9. Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

10. Harvard Medical School , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background The WHO Surgical Safety Checklist reduces morbidity and mortality after surgery, but uptake remains challenging. In particular, low-income countries have been found to have lower rates of checklist use compared with high-income countries. The aim of this study was to determine the impact of educational workshops on Surgical Safety Checklist use implemented as part of a quality improvement initiative in five hospitals in Ethiopia that had variable experience with the Surgical Safety Checklist. Methods From April 2019 to September 2020, each hospital implemented a 6-month surgical quality improvement programme, which included a Surgical Safety Checklist workshop. Statistical process control methodology was used to understand the variation in Surgical Safety Checklist compliance before and after workshops and a time-series analysis was performed using population-averaged generalized estimating equation Poisson regression. Checklist compliance was defined as correctly completing a sign in, timeout, and sign out. Incidence rate ratios of correct checklist use pre- and post-intervention were calculated and the change in mean weekly compliance was predicted. Results Checklist compliance data were obtained from 2767 operations (1940 (70 per cent) pre-intervention and 827 (30 per cent) post-intervention). Mean weekly checklist compliance improved from 27.3 to 41.2 per cent (mean difference 13.9 per cent, P = 0.001; incidence rate ratio 1.51, P = 0.001). Hospitals with higher checklist compliance at baseline had the greatest overall improvements in compliance, more than 50 per cent over pre-intervention, while low-performing hospitals showed no improvement. Conclusion Surgical Safety Checklist workshops improved checklist compliance in hospitals with some experience with its use. Workshops had little effect in hospitals unfamiliar with the Surgical Safety Checklist, emphasizing the importance of multifactorial interventions and culture-change approaches. In receptive facilities, short workshops can accelerate behaviour change.

Funder

Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh Global Surgery Foundation

Lifebox Foundation

Stanford University Center for Innovation

Fogarty International Center Global Health Equity Scholars Program

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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