Skip to main content

The PSNet Collection: All Content

The AHRQ PSNet Collection comprises an extensive selection of resources relevant to the patient safety community. These resources come in a variety of formats, including literature, research, tools, and Web sites. Resources are identified using the National Library of Medicine’s Medline database, various news and content aggregators, and the expertise of the AHRQ PSNet editorial and technical teams.

Search All Content

Search Tips
Selection
Format
Download
Filter By Author(s)
Advanced Filtering Mode
Date Ranges
Published Date
Original Publication Date
Original Publication Date
PSNet Publication Date
Additional Filters
All Resource Types
Approach to Improving Safety
Clinical Area
Safety Target
Selection
Format
Download
Displaying 1 - 20 of 1694 Results

Arnal-Velasco, D, ed. Curr Opin Anaesthesiol. 2023;36(6):649-705.

Adoption of new ideas is necessary to create safety in the perioperative environment. This collection of reviews illustrates relationships and tensions between technology, human factors and safety management that create the sociotechnical system within which technology is used to deliver anesthesia. Topics covered include artificial intelligence, decision making and perioperative deterioration.
MohammadiGorji S, Joseph A, Mihandoust S, et al. HERD. 2023;Epub Aug 8.
Well-designed workspaces minimize disruptions and distractions. This review and study describes several important ways to improve the anesthesia workspace in the operating room. Recommendations include demarcating an anesthesia zone with adequate space for equipment and storage and that restricts unnecessary staff travel into and through the zone. Each recommendation includes an illustrative diagram, explains its importance, and offers methods to achieve it.
Lim PJH, Chen L, Siow S, et al. Int J Qual Health Care. 2023;35:mzad086.
Surgical safety checklists (SCC) are utilized around the world, but checklist completion at the operating room level remains inconsistent. This review summarizes facilitators and barriers to completion. Resistance or endorsement at the individual surgeon level remains a significant factor in SSC completion. Early inclusion of frontline staff in evaluation and implementation supported increased use.

Pelikan M, Finney RE, Jacob A. AANA J. 2023;91(5):371-379.

Providers involved in patient safety incidents can experience adverse psychological and physiological outcomes, also referred to as second victim experiences (SVE). This study used the Second Victim Experience and Support Tool (SVEST) to evaluate the impact of a peer support program on anesthesia providers’ SVE. Two years after program implementation, reported psychological distress decreased and over 80% of participants expressed favorable views of the program and its impact on safety culture.
Gallois JB, Zagory JA, Barkemeyer B, et al. Pediatr Qual Saf. 2023;8:e695.
Structured handoff tools can improve situational awareness and patient safety. This study describes the development and implementation of a bespoke tool for handoffs from the operating room to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). While use remained inconsistent during the study period, the goal of 80% compliance was achieved and 83% surveyed staff agreed or strongly agreed that the handoff provided needed information, up from 21% before implementation.
Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2023;Epub Oct 18.
Surgical fires are a rare yet potentially harmful event for both patients and care teams. The alert provides reduction guidance for organizations to mitigate conditions that enable surgical fires and suggests tactics to improve communication as a primary strategy for preventing this potentially catastrophic accident in operating rooms.

McEvoy MD, Abernathy JH, 3rd. Anesthesiol Clin. 2023;41(4):xvii-xix;693-886.

Organizational, unit, and team culture affect the safety of surgical care. This special issue examines overarching principles, common practices, and practical actions that support safe perioperative processes and settings. Topics discussed include team dynamics, operating room design, and high reliability.
Sutcliffe KM. Anesthesiol Clin. 2023;41:707-717.
Achieving high reliability remains difficult for many organizations. This article provides a brief history of the concept of high reliability organizations (HROs) and key features of high reliability culture, such as fostering trust and respect among teams and creating systems and processes to elicit feedback/reflections and identify opportunities for improvement. The authors discuss these concepts in the setting of anesthesiology and perioperative care.
Roy JM, Rumalla K, Skandalakis GP, et al. Neurosurg Rev. 2023;46:227.
Failure to rescue (FTR) quality metrics measure the ability of healthcare teams and hospitals to prevent mortality following a major complication. This systematic review included 12 studies and examined how FTR has been used in neurosurgical populations. The authors discuss several modifications to existing FTR definitions to better suit neurosurgical patients, such as incorporating measures of baseline frailty.

Washington, DC: The Veterans Affairs Inspector General. October 4, 2023. Report No. 23-00080-227.

Wrong-site surgery and unintentionally retained surgical items are considered never events. This report details five wrong-site surgeries and three instances of retained surgical items at one VA medical center between 2018 and 2022. The findings suggest that timely investigation into events from 2018-2021 may have prevented three incidents in 2022. Additionally, the medical center failed to fully report the provider responsible for three of the wrong-site surgeries.
Ramjaun A, Hammond Mobilio M, Wright N, et al. Ann Surg. 2023;278:e1142-e1147.
Situational awareness is an essential component of teamwork. This qualitative study examined how situational awareness and team culture impact intraoperative handoff practice. Researchers found that participants often assumed that team members are interchangeable and that trained staff should be able to determine handoff appropriateness without having to consult the larger operating room team – both of these assumptions hinder team communication and situational awareness.
Moyal-Smith R, Etheridge JC, Turley N, et al. BMJ Qual Saf. 2023;Epub Sep 21.
Implementation challenges can hinder the effectiveness of the WHO Surgical Safety Checklist (SSC). This study describes the validation of the Checklist Performance Observation for Improvement (CheckPOINT) tool to assess SSC implementation fidelity. Based on testing in simulated and real-life clinical practice, researchers found that that the tool can reliably assess implementation fidelity and identify opportunities for improvement.
Bagian JP, Paull DE, DeRosier JM. Surg Open Sci. 2023;16:33-36.
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) requires post-graduate education to include patient safety curriculum. This article describes the development and evaluation of a curriculum for residents on patient safety investigations using the Root Cause Analysis and Action (RCA2) model. Residents were surveyed at least one year after completion of the training. Sixty-three percent of respondents agreed or strongly agreed residents should be provided with the RCA2 training and nearly half reported having participated on an RCA team since completing the program.
Samost-Williams A, Rosen R, Hannenberg A, et al. Ann Surg Open. 2023;4:e321.
Morbidity and mortality conferences offer important opportunities for healthcare teams to discuss adverse events, learn from errors, and improve patient safety. This systematic review examined beneficial aspects of perioperative team-based morbidity and mortality (TBMM) conferences. The authors found that TBMM conferences generally led to improvements in patient safety, quality improvement, and educational outcomes and that certain factors (case preparation, standardized presentation format, effective facilitation) increase TBMM benefits.
Ryan AN, Robertson KL, Glass BD. Int J Clin Pharm. 2023;Epub Sep 9.
Look-alike medications can cause confusion and contribute to medication administration errors. This scoping review including 18 articles identified several risk reduction strategies to mitigate look-alike medication errors in perioperative settings, such as improved labelling and standardization of storage. The authors note that further research is needed to assess the effectiveness of technology-based solutions, such as automated dispensing cabinets.
Harbell MW, Maloney J, Anderson MA, et al. Curr Pain Headache Rep. 2023;27:407-415.
Provider bias may impact the pain management patients receive post-operatively. This review presents recent findings on the types and amounts of pain management patients receive. Results suggest women and people of color receive less pain medication despite reporting higher pain scores. Results regarding socio-economic status and English language proficiency bias are mixed. Implicit bias training, prescribing guidelines for all patients, and culturally competent pain management scales have all been suggested as ways to reduce provider bias and improve pain management.
Soenens G, Marchand B, Doyen B, et al. Ann Surg. 2023;278:e5-e12.
Leadership style can dramatically impact the culture of safety. This analysis of video-recorded endovascular procedures found that surgeons’ transformational leadership style (e.g., motivation/enthusiasm, individual consideration, emphasis on the collective mission) positively impacts team behaviors such as speaking up behaviors and knowledge sharing.
Levy BE, Wilt WS, Lantz S, et al. J Patient Saf. 2023;19:453-459.
The surgical time out is an effective strategy to reduce errors and improve team communication but full team participation remains a challenge. This article describes a Plan, Do, Study, Act project of developing and implementing a white board time out checklist to encourage all operating room personnel to participate. A significant increase in the number of completed time out items was seen after implementation.

Ehrenwerth J. UptoDate. September 27, 2023..

Operating room fires are never events that, while rare, still harbor great potential for harm. This review discusses settings prone to surgical fire events, prevention strategies, and care management steps should patients be harmed by an operating room fire.

Banks MA. Specialty Pharmacy Continuum. September 15, 2023.

Radiofrequency identification (RFID) devices are being used to improve processes in the operating room and prevent errors. This article examines the use of RFID tracking to build reliability into operating room anesthesia medication refiling process. The experience at one hospital found that the RFID process reduced errors, while increasing the task completion time.