World Health Organization Surgical Safety Checklist
World Health Organization Surgical Safety Checklist
World Health Organization Surgical Safety Checklist
Edited by
Dr. Isabeau Walker
Consultant Anaesthetist, Great Ormond Street Hospital, London, UK
QUESTIONS
Before continuing, try to answer the following questions. The answers can be found at the end of the article, together
with an explanation. Please answer True or False:
The aim of this ‘WHO checklist’ was to give teams a simple, efficient set of priority checks to improve effective teamwork
and communication and encourage active consideration of patient safety for every operation performed. WHO also
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wanted to ensure consistency in patient safety in surgery and introduce (or maintain) a culture that values patient safety .
In a pilot study of the WHO checklist implementation, Professor Gawande’s team prospectively observed over 3000
patients prior to the introduction of the checklist and nearly 4000 patients after checklist implementation, and measured
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the rate of surgical complication or mortality up to 30 days after surgery or until discharge . The study included four
hospitals in low- and middle-income countries and four hospitals in high-income countries and found the overall rate of
death prior to introduction of the checklist was 1.5% and after checklist implementation fell to 0.8%. Inpatient
complications were also reduced, from 11% pre checklist to 7% after the checklist was introduced. As a measure of
adherence to the checklist, they identified 6 safety indicators, such as pre-incision antibiotics, swab counts and routine
anaesthetic checks, and saw an increase in performance of these from 34.2% pre checklist to 56.7% post checklist. It is
interesting that even with only 56% completing these 6 indicators, significant reductions in complications and death rates
were seen. The checklist implementation team used team introductions, briefings and debriefings as part of the safety
routine, which has also been formalised as part of the checklist strategy in the UK (see below).
By September 2014, the WHO team had identified 4132 institutions who had expressed an interest in using the checklist
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and 1790 institutions who were actively using the checklist in at least one operating theatre . Seven years after
introduction of the checklist, numerous studies have shown the benefit of the checklist, but observers, audits and trials
have also reported common barriers to successful use of this patient safety tool. Key to successful implementation
across all cultures, economies and specialties seems to be engagement of the whole team, through understanding the
relevance and power of this tool in their setting.
1. Sign in – before induction of anaesthesia, ideally with surgeon present, but not essential
Verbally verify, review with the patient when possible:
a. Patient identity
b. Procedure and site
c. Consent for surgery
d. Operative site is marked if appropriate (involving left or right distinction)
e. Pulse oximeter is on the patient and functioning
Review between anaesthetist and checklist coordinator:
f. Patient’s risk of blood loss. If >500ml in adults or >7ml/kg in children, it is recommended to have at least 2
large bore intravenous lines or a central line before surgical incision and fluids or blood available
g. Airway difficulty or aspiration risk. Where a potentially high-risk airway is identified, at a minimum the
approach to anaesthesia should be adjusted accordingly, emergency equipment must be accessible and a
capable assistant should be physically present during induction. Symptomatic active reflux or a full stomach
should also be handled with a modified plan
h. Known allergies - all members of team need to be aware
i. Anaesthesia safety checks complete (equipment, medications, emergency medications, patient’s
anaesthetic risk)
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2. Time out – after induction and before surgical incision, entire team
a. Each team member introduces him/herself by name and role
b. Pause to confirm correct operation for correct patient on correct site. Anaesthetist, nurse and surgeon
should all individually confirm agreement, plus the patient if awake
c. Review anticipated critical events
i. Surgical critical/unexpected steps, operative duration, anticipated blood loss
ii. Anaesthetic patient specific concerns, for example, intention to use blood products, co-morbidities
iii. Nurses confirm sterility of instruments and discuss equipment issues/concerns
d. Confirm prophylactic antibiotics where required, was given within the 60 minutes prior to skin incision. If not
given and required, administer prior to incision. If >60 minutes, consider re-dosing the patient
e. Essential imaging displayed as appropriate
3. Sign out – during or immediately after wound closure, before moving the patient out of the operating room, whilst
surgeon still present
a. Confirm operation performed and recorded
b. Check instrument, sponge/swab and needle counts are complete. Where numbers do not reconcile the
team should be alerted and take steps to investigate
c. Check surgical specimens labelled correctly
d. Highlight equipment issues
e. Verbalize plans or concerns for recovery and postoperatively, especially any specific risks
Before induction of anaesthesia Before skin incision Before patient leaves operating room
(with at least nurse and anaesthetist) (with nurse, anaesthetist and surgeon) (with nurse, anaesthetist and surgeon)
Has the patient confirmed his/her identity, Confirm all team members have Nurse Verbally Confirms:
site, procedure, and consent? introduced themselves by name and role. The name of the procedure
Yes Confirm the patient’s name, procedure, Completion of instrument, sponge and needle
Is the site marked? and where the incision will be made. counts
Yes Has antibiotic prophylaxis been given within Specimen labelling (read specimen labels aloud,
the last 60 minutes? including patient name)
Not applicable Whether there are any equipment problems to be
Yes addressed
Is the anaesthesia machine and medication Not applicable
check complete? To Surgeon, Anaesthetist and Nurse:
Yes Anticipated Critical Events What are the key concerns for recovery and
Is the pulse oximeter on the patient and To Surgeon: management of this patient?
functioning? What are the critical or non-routine steps?
Yes How long will the case take?
Does the patient have a: What is the anticipated blood loss?
Known allergy? To Anaesthetist:
No Are there any patient-specific concerns?
Yes To Nursing Team:
Difficult airway or aspiration risk? Has sterility (including indicator results)
No been confirmed?
Yes, and equipment/assistance available Are there equipment issues or any concerns?
This checklist is not intended to be comprehensive. Additions and modifications to fit local practice are encouraged. Revised 1 / 2009 © WHO, 2009
Figure 1. WHO Surgical Safety Checklist. Reproduced with permission of the World Health Organization
Although facilities are encouraged to modify the checklist as needed, they are discouraged from removing safety steps
simply because they cannot be accomplished. They also caution facilities from adding too many additional steps and
creating an unmanageable, complex checklist. In England and Wales, the National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) issued
a patient safety alert in 2009. They launched a modified checklist for England and Wales with instructions to appoint a
clinical lead within each organisation, ensure the checklist was completed for every patient undergoing a surgical
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procedure and that record of the checklist was entered into the patient notes . A guide to modification of the checklist is
available on the WHO website, as well as examples of modified checklists from around the world:
http://www.who.int/patientsafety/safesurgery/local_adaptation/en/
The debriefing naturally occurs at the end of the list, before any team members have left the theatre or department. The
purpose of this debrief is to reflect on the list and share perspective on tasks that went well and tasks that did not go well.
This may include discussion of teamwork, the theatre atmosphere, errors or near misses, and a retrospective look at the
briefing and use of the surgical safety checklist throughout the day. It is important to register successes, learning points,
areas that require change or escalation and for this to be conducted in a non-threatening, open environment. Patient
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Safety First developed and promoted the ‘Five Steps to Safer Surgery’ (Figure 2)
Start of list WHO Surgical Safety Checklist for each patient End of list
Leadership
• Leaders in surgery, anaesthesia and nursing are very influential. It is important for leaders to embrace patient safety
as a priority and to use the surgical safety checklist for their own cases. Senior members of staff should act as local
champions on the ‘shop floor’, to support junior staff when they want to speak up or challenge an item, or simply to
ask a question if they don’t understand something. These champions should be approachable, accessible and have
skills in negotiation and persuasion. They need to create an honest, transparent culture and a baseline acceptance
that we are all fallible and omissions can occur in any facility under anyone’s watch.
• It is important that the checklist is not mandated as a top-down chore for the staff, but that there is enthusiasm and
engagement within the workforce, giving them good reason to engage. By using evidence from experience of near
misses or adverse incidents, leaders can encourage transparency and honesty, and encourage teams to see the
value of these routine checks.
• In addition to leaders and champions, it is important to engage administrative staff. New resources may be needed
or simply a supply of paper for checklists in each theatre. Administrative support may also be required to ensure the
antibiotic supply chain is established and that the proper equipment is available, including equipment to sterilise
surgical instruments.
• The implementation team should lead staff training, with in situ demonstrations, videos and coaching when they start
to use the checklist. Training should be multi-professional, incorporating the whole team. This helps to flatten the
hierarchy in theatre, and for many, it can be very revealing to see the world through the eyes of another.
• In addition to teaching sessions, it is helpful to raise awareness, for instance through posters, newsletters or
computer screen savers.
• The implementation team should consider whether to implement the checklist in one area first or to introduce the
checklist unit-wide. One example of effective implementation in Washington State described initially piloting the
checklist in a small number of operating theatres. Due to the publication in newsletters of ‘poster child’ success, the
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other theatres were impatient to wait for official rollout and the checklist spread spontaneously .
• Where an item on the checklist is not a routine practice in your facility, for instance, a team brief or de-brief, or pre-
incision antibiotics or counting surgical instruments, focused training in that area will be needed. These items can be
introduced in a stepwise approach, mastering one new item for a period, before adding a second new item.
• Retained swabs, needles or instruments are the most commonly reported serious adverse events in surgery.
Training should incorporate the safety impact of such tasks so that staff are given reason to perform them and to
recheck the patient if the count is not correct. It will be difficult to complete a surgical instrument count if there is no
standardised pack or formal instrument list. Through generation of formal packs and lists, and routine counting out of
equipment when it is placed on the surgical trolley, the hazards of retained swabs, needles and instruments can be
reduced. All staff groups need to understand the importance of new checks added to practice, to avoid one group
finding this a disruptive, time consuming intervention.
• Timely administration of antibiotics at least 15 but not more than 60 minutes before knife to skin (including in
caesarean section) is an effective intervention to reduce surgical site infection, and anaesthetists can make an
important contribution to reducing this complication. It is important to establish local antibiotic protocols and to make
sure that these are adhered to.
• It is useful to encourage teams to communicate clearly. Checks need to be performed out loud for all of the
operating team to hear. Avoid leading questions (the antibiotics have been given haven’t they?); rather use specific
communication to a named individual (Question: Dr X: have you given the antibiotics? Dr X Answer: Yes, the
antibiotics have been given).
• Staff need to free themselves up from distracting tasks when the checks are being completed, ideally asking for ‘a
surgical pause’ or ‘a moment of silence’ to gather everyone’s attention. In addition to being attentive, all members
need to be present. It is helpful for the sign out to be completed whilst the surgeon is closing the wound as this
integrates the checklist into the surgical process and ensures the surgeon is still present in theatre.
• Some facilities have found it useful to record the checklist information on a whiteboard or laminated paper in theatre,
to refer to during the case. With operating team members changing frequently, staff names particularly may be
easily forgotten and the team may find it helpful to display each staff member’s name.
• Where the checklist is not part of the computer system, give each theatre a folder with multiple paper copies. Use of
the checklist should be documented in the patient record, for instance, on the anaesthetic chart.
• Routine pre-anaesthesia safety checks and the use of a pulse oximeter are part of the WHO Standards for Safe
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Surgery, also the WFSA International Standards for the Safe Practice of Anaesthesia 2010 . The Lifebox
Foundation has been established to facilitate access to pulse oximeters in low- and middle-income countries where
these are not available (www.lifebox.org); if you do not have access to a pulse oximeter, please contact Lifebox and
make yourself known.
• Data can be collected in the form of ‘process measures’ – for instance, audit samples of the patient records on a
weekly basis to see if the checklist has been completed or if antibiotics have been given before knife to skin. Ask a
member of the team to observe in theatre to see if the checklist is being done, or to check whether all items on the
checklist have been completed.
• ‘Outcome measures’ such as surgical start times, reason for delays, adverse events, near misses, and post-
operative infections have been used to support the introduction of the checklist. Patient stories are a powerful way to
motivate teams.
• The implementation team should feed this information back to the theatre team on a regular basis, ideally as ‘run
charts’. A run chart is a simple plot of frequency of event (% patients with checklist completed, or antibiotics given)
against time, so that the theatre team can see how they are performing each week or month. Consider comparing
one theatre to another – competition is an effective driver for change. Use these results to stimulate discussion
about why things work well, or to discover the barriers that prevent success.
• It is also important to present these data to the hospital administrative team (e.g. managers) so that recurring
problems such as lack of resource or system issues can be addressed promptly. On the other hand, making them
aware of improvement in patient outcomes will further incentivise management to endorse patient safety projects.
Implementation
team
Training
Briefing
Communication Debriefing
Multidisciplinary
Focused training
for new practice Names Everybody
listening
SUMMARY
Preventable harm occurs daily during surgery across the world. The WHO checklist was introduced as one
means of reducing harm and improving patient safety in the operating theatre. With the benefit of hindsight,
trials and audit, we have gained experience and identified the key factors that enable successful use of the
checklist. These are senior multidisciplinary support, surgical buy-in, ensuring underlying processes of care
are in place, and using local champions to enthuse and encourage staff.
The checklist needs to become part of routine surgical culture, even more so in an emergency or at the
end of a long shift when simple tasks are easily forgotten. With consistent use, team members will become
familiar with the checks, less embarrassed about using them, more time efficient, and break down the
barriers to success. And ultimately, patient harm will be reduced.
ANSWERS
1.
a. False: Implementation of the checklist is a team effort. The team should represent everyone who works in
theatre in order to get buy-in from all theatre personnel.
b. False: Experienced members of the theatre team who are committed to improving patient safety should lead
the implementation process. Senior members of staff are very influential and need to be engaged; students are
a very valuable resource and can help support the implementation process if they have support of the leaders in
theatre.
c. False: Real time mentorship in theatre and continual feedback on progress of implementation is a powerful
driver to influence change. It is useful to use regular observations and informal discussions on how things could
be improved, rather than waiting until the end of an implementation period to evaluate the difficulties.
e. True: Reporting and sharing stories of near misses or adverse incidents helps people to see how the checklist
can be useful. Run charts of checklist completion rate can help people to see how they are doing with the
‘process’; audits of outcomes such as wound infections are more difficult to do, but can inspire a team to use
safety checklists.
2.
a. True
b. False: It is even more valuable to use the WHO checklist in an emergency as simple safety checks can easily
be forgotten in a pressurised, urgent environment.
c. False: All staff members should feel able to raise questions and talk without fear or embarrassment. This can
be encouraged by creating an open, non-hierarchal environment.
d. False: Antibiotics should be given 15- 60 minutes prior to the skin incision.
e. True: ‘Counting’ surgical swabs and instruments is an important part of modern surgical nursing. It is easier if
there are standardised numbers of packs used (for instance, swabs are put on the surgical trolley in packs of 5)
and a standard list of instruments so that they can be checked off at the end of the operation.
3.
a. False: The briefing is held before the start of the list and debriefing at the end of the list rather than before and
after every case.
b. True
c. False: A pre-list briefing can be used to pre-empt or trouble shoot equipment or safety issues and anticipate
challenges for the list. The whole team should be present for pre-list briefing.
d. False: The briefing should take around 10 minutes, but will save delays throughout the day.
e. False: When a list has run safely, efficiently and uneventfully, it is useful to look at the team behaviours during
that list that contributed to success. By verbalising what went well the team can actively take those positive
strategies into their next list.
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