Sunday, March 1, 2009

Culture eats checklists for lunch

Last month, I made a day trip to Regina on a small, local airline. While I waited for my return flight in their Regina airport lounge, a Canadian Forces aircrew was also waiting. There were about a dozen of them, getting ready to fly out in their huge transport plane. The lounge was small, and the aircrew were quite boisterous, joking and clowning around. What happened next has been on my mind since then. But before I tell you about that...


Pre-op checklists garnered the limelight recently and briefly with the publication of the WHO international study that showed improvement in morbidity and mortality after the checklists were implemented. Just over a year ago, I blogged about WHO's checklist in beta version, and some responses I'd seen in the OR.

Not much has changed since then.

Recently, I was called into an OR room because the staff had difficulty inserting a catheter in a patient anaesthetized for abdominal surgery. I had to do another minor procedure to get the catheter in, and before starting, I asked if we should stop to do the preop checklist. The surgeon, who was waiting in the room, piped up dismissively, "Oh, jeez, come on. I know this guy!", and then proceeded to rattle off the patient's name, planned procedure, general health and allergies, auctioneer-style. "That checklist is such a waste of time", he concluded. There were sour looks on the staff's faces, but I couldn't tell whether it was because they agreed that the checklist was a waste of time, or because they disagreed with his assessment. The charge nurse went through the checklist, despite the surgeon's contempt.

Bryce Taylor, chair of Toronto's Department of Surgery and an author of the WHO report, was recently in Saskatoon to present the report, and discuss how to implement the checklist. One of the OR nurses who had attended the lecture commented that it might be difficult to convince all surgeons to embrace the checklist. I suggested that we needed to come up with the right incentives, perhaps going as far as linking the surgeon's access to OR time to his/her performance on critical patient safety issues. If our administration is truly committed to universal use of a safety checklist, they need to be anticipate that there may be a few surgeons who will push the issue that far.

The nurse laughed. "Can you please let me know when you're going to tell Dr. X that he can't operate until he does the checklist," she snorted. "I want to be in the room for that!"

These are a couple of examples of how the OR culture can affect improvement efforts. "Culture eats strategy for lunch" applies here.

But, don't despair! There are other cultures from which we can learn. Back to the airport...

The military aircrew were horsing around in the airport lounge when one of the officers quietly called out.

"Gentlemen. Let's get ready to fly."

Immediately, the aircrew settled down and gathered round. The officer recited the flight duration, altitude, weather conditions and other details. He called for questions. I suspect the crew members already knew most of the details of the flight, yet were completely attentive for the 1 minute briefing. The officer didn't need to raise his voice, or repeat his call for their attention.

Now, that is a professional, safety-conscious culture.

In my first OR vignette, the surgeon insisted that he already knew all the critical information about the patient and the planned surgery. Well, I certainly hope he would. But he misses the point that the checklist is not just for the surgeon; it's for the whole OR team. Also, the purpose of the checklist goes beyond the recitation of critical safety information. The checklist should foster and be part of a culture of open communication and cooperation in the OR. Check out some of the comments at the end of this Wall Street Journal article about the WHO checklist. People are amazed that checklists aren't already standard in ORs.

I guess it comes down to the Golden Rule. If you were on the OR table (or an airplane!), would you want the team looking after you to be communicating openly with the single goal of providing the safest, most effective service of which they were capable? Or are you comfortable with letting someone hinder, under the banner of professional autonomy, everyone else's efforts on your behalf?

5 comments:

bclavier said...

Never mind the "God complex" that must be the exclusive preserve of surgeons (as opposed to mere physicians), the stories you relate about the disdain shown for the surgery checklist and the military's religious adherence to a checklist may reflect their respective pay levels: more green (in pocket) versus less green (in clothing) equals arrogance and over-confidence versus humility and self-preservation. Can I get the Armed Forces to show up for my next surgical procedure?

Anonymous said...

Possibly we are trying to reach the wrong people. Often people don't change unless they see a reason to change, unless they are 'motivated' to change.

We need to be reaching out to the public and the hospital adminstrators.

After I have read the above postings I know I will NEVER have surgery or allow any of my family member to have surgery unless the surgeon assures me that a pre- op check list will be performed.

It is the public who needs to be educated to advocate for this very simple life savying procedure to be performed.

Also, hospital adminstrators (who are suppose to be protecting the public, not the physicians) should be making this manditory.
This is not a proceedure that should not be left up to descretion, and/or to ask the OR nurses to institute.

It should be very simple - if the surgeon does not wish to do the list then he/she finds another hospital setting to practice.

Kishore Visvanathan said...

Amen to Anonymous! I agree that it will be extremely powerful when the public/patients insist on the checklist being performed. I commented on this in a previous post - "He's making a list, checking it twice".

Some healthcare workers are hobbled by an "us vs them" mentality, i.e. we are the medical system; they are the patients. But, there is no "them" - it's all "us". Our families, our loved ones, our communities, ourselves.

So, once again, it comes down to the Golden Rule. What kind of care do I want when I'm on the operating table?

Anonymous said...

Interesting.. I don't watch a lot of TV, but ER recently had an episode that covered this checklist! In that show the checklist met the same oposition by the surgeon, but was done anyway. If my family member is in surgery it would be of great comfort to know the staff and surgeon would experise the same professionalism as our military.

Anonymous said...

I am a Sk healthcare patient since Jan 09 that circumed to the error of not having a procedure check list for a straight forward nerve root ablation in radiology. The Dr. waited for the referring surgeon to direct him to the correct nerve root but he then even asked myself which nerve root should be done. In the end after not being under anything to sedate me for pain I received a nerve block that not only did not work but ended up being in the wrong location. If there had been electronic filing of my MRI this may not have happened and if I had known there would be confusion I would have brought along my health records binder that I started to collect due to insurance purposes. If the system cannot access the broad reports and information for the doctors to get them all on the same page then I believe the patient has to be proactive and ask for every report along the way. I only wish I could carry my records on a chip on my healthcare card so that every time I swiped it an update would take place. I look forward to seeing you Dr. Visvanathan on Mar 11 at 4:30 for a second opinion consultation with my binder in tow.