TY - JOUR
T1 - Barriers to staff adoption of a surgical safety checklist
AU - Fourcade, Aude
AU - Blache, Jean Louis
AU - Grenier, Catherine
AU - Bourgain, Jean Louis
AU - Minvielle, Etienne
PY - 2012/3/1
Y1 - 2012/3/1
N2 - Objective: Implementation of a surgical checklist depends on many organisational factors and on sociocultural patterns. The objective of this study was to identify barriers to effective implementation of a surgical checklist and to develop a best use strategy. Setting: 18 cancer centres in France. Design: The authors first assessed use compliance and completeness rates of the surgical checklist on a random sample of 80 surgical procedures performed under general or loco-regional anaesthesia in each of the 18 centres. They then developed a typology of the organisational and cultural barriers to effective checklist implementation and defined each barrier's contents using data from collective and semistructured individual interviews of key staff, the results of an email questionnaire sent to the 18 centres, and direct observations over 20 h in two centres. Results: The study consisted of 1440 surgical procedures, 1299 checklists, and 28 578 items. The mean compliance rate was 90.2% (0, 100). The mean completion rate was 61% (0, 84). 11 barriers to effective checklist implementation were identified. Their incidence varied widely across centres. The main barriers were duplication of items within existing checklists (16/18 centres), poor communication between surgeon and anaesthetist (10/18), time spent completing the checklist for no perceived benefit, and lack of understanding and timing of item checks (9/18), ambiguity (8/18), unaccounted risks (7/18) and a time-honoured hierarchy (6/18). Conclusions: Several of the barriers to the successful implementation of the surgical checklist depended on organisational and cultural factors within each centre. The authors propose a strategy for change for checklist design, use and assessment, which could be used to construct a feedback loop for local team organisation and national initiatives.
AB - Objective: Implementation of a surgical checklist depends on many organisational factors and on sociocultural patterns. The objective of this study was to identify barriers to effective implementation of a surgical checklist and to develop a best use strategy. Setting: 18 cancer centres in France. Design: The authors first assessed use compliance and completeness rates of the surgical checklist on a random sample of 80 surgical procedures performed under general or loco-regional anaesthesia in each of the 18 centres. They then developed a typology of the organisational and cultural barriers to effective checklist implementation and defined each barrier's contents using data from collective and semistructured individual interviews of key staff, the results of an email questionnaire sent to the 18 centres, and direct observations over 20 h in two centres. Results: The study consisted of 1440 surgical procedures, 1299 checklists, and 28 578 items. The mean compliance rate was 90.2% (0, 100). The mean completion rate was 61% (0, 84). 11 barriers to effective checklist implementation were identified. Their incidence varied widely across centres. The main barriers were duplication of items within existing checklists (16/18 centres), poor communication between surgeon and anaesthetist (10/18), time spent completing the checklist for no perceived benefit, and lack of understanding and timing of item checks (9/18), ambiguity (8/18), unaccounted risks (7/18) and a time-honoured hierarchy (6/18). Conclusions: Several of the barriers to the successful implementation of the surgical checklist depended on organisational and cultural factors within each centre. The authors propose a strategy for change for checklist design, use and assessment, which could be used to construct a feedback loop for local team organisation and national initiatives.
U2 - 10.1136/bmjqs-2011-000094
DO - 10.1136/bmjqs-2011-000094
M3 - Article
C2 - 22069112
AN - SCOPUS:84857446353
SN - 2044-5415
VL - 21
SP - 191
EP - 197
JO - BMJ Quality and Safety
JF - BMJ Quality and Safety
IS - 3
ER -