Can people in the operating room multitask when it comes to counting sponges? I know surgeons listen to music, talk about the stock market and their investments, and chat with the OR staff. But when it comes to safety, there is no fool-proof technology system to detect retained sponges. Gel pads that alarm when a tagged sponge is left inside a patient, a wand that is waved over the body to scan the patient after surgery, radiofrequency tags – all have some kind of drawback.
The consequences of incorrect sponge counts
- Panic in the operating room when the count discrepancy is announced
- Urgency to find the sponge to resolve the issue and keep the schedule on time
- Possible development of pain and adhesions from retained sponges
- Litigation for retained sponges, with cases frequently being won by plaintiffs: “Defendant, get out your checkbook”
- Loss of reimbursement for care related to removing the sponge
- Loss of reputation when the public becomes aware of the facility’s problem of retained items
Curing the problem of retained sponges
A cognitive psychologist from Minnesota, Kathleen Harder, is credited with identifying teamwork techniques to tackle the problem. These include:
1. Having a preoperative briefing during which members of the surgical team say hello to each other and exchange names
2. Counting the sponges before the case begins, rather than under the pressure at the beginning of the case.
3. Not allowing surgeons to interrupt a counting process.
4. Displaying counts on a wall-mounted board where all can see it.
5. Requiring the surgeon to announce he or she has tucked a sponge under an organ (which is noted on the board).
6. Counting performed by two people standing side by side, focused only on counting.
7. Organizing surgical items the same way in every operating room, counting them in the same order every time.
Does this work?
When University of Minnesota Medical Center and Christina Care Health System implemented these techniques, they reduced retained sponges and surgical items to zero for 154,000 surgeries.
Learn more about retained sponges by watching the digital download of a webinar we presented on this topic.