Introduction of Surgical Safety Checklists in Ontario, Canada
University Health Network · University of Toronto · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Evidence from observational studies that the use of surgical safety checklists results in striking improvements in surgical outcomes led to the rapid adoption of such checklists worldwide. However, the effect of mandatory adoption of surgical safety checklists is unclear. A policy encouraging the universal adoption of checklists by hospitals in Ontario, Canada, provided a natural experiment to assess the effectiveness of checklists in typical practice settings.
We surveyed all acute care hospitals in Ontario to determine when surgical safety checklists were adopted. Using administrative health data, we compared operative mortality, rate of surgical complications, length of hospital stay, and rates of hospital readmission and emergency department visits within 30 days after discharge among patients undergoing a variety of surgical procedures before and after adoption of a checklist.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 143.54
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 25
Authors
5- DRDavid R. UrbachCorresponding
University Health Network, University of Toronto, Institute of Health Services and Policy Research, Mount Sinai Hospital, Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
- AGAnand Govindarajan
Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
- RSRefik Saskin
Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
- ASAndrew S. Wilton
Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
- NNNancy N. Baxter
St. Michael's Hospital, Institute of Health Services and Policy Research, Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Checklist
- Odds ratio
- Confidence interval
- Patient safety
- Observational study
- Acute care
- Emergency medicine