Surgery cancellations after entering the operating room

Abstract Background Surgery cancellation results in unavailability of the operating room and loss time. We identified the frequency of and reasons for operation cancellations after patients entered the operating room and assessed the preventability of such cancellations. Findings A retrospective cha...

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Main Authors: Yoko Hori, Ayami Nakayama, Atsuhiro Sakamoto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2016-11-01
Series:JA Clinical Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40981-016-0066-1
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spelling doaj-5851fff7172447bfb4b4a302a248c4e02021-03-02T09:45:40ZengSpringerOpenJA Clinical Reports2363-90242016-11-01211410.1186/s40981-016-0066-1Surgery cancellations after entering the operating roomYoko Hori0Ayami Nakayama1Atsuhiro Sakamoto2Department of Anesthesiology, Nippon Medical SchoolDepartment of Anesthesiology, Nippon Medical SchoolDepartment of Anesthesiology, Nippon Medical SchoolAbstract Background Surgery cancellation results in unavailability of the operating room and loss time. We identified the frequency of and reasons for operation cancellations after patients entered the operating room and assessed the preventability of such cancellations. Findings A retrospective chart review of all scheduled surgical procedures proposed under general anesthesia in a period spanning 2008 to 2016 was performed, and the reasons for cancellation were assessed. A total of 30 surgery procedures were cancelled after the patient had entered the operation room and preparation for general anesthesia had been completed. Ten of 18 cases (55.6%) that were cancelled before general anesthesia induction could have been prevented, accounting for 36.7% of the overall cancellations. The majority of the cancellations after anesthesia were due to the patients’ health status. Conclusions Improving the systems for checking patients’ medical problems and performing preoperative evaluations can reduce the number of cancellations after the patient has entered the operating room.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40981-016-0066-1CancellationGeneral anesthesiaSurgery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yoko Hori
Ayami Nakayama
Atsuhiro Sakamoto
spellingShingle Yoko Hori
Ayami Nakayama
Atsuhiro Sakamoto
Surgery cancellations after entering the operating room
JA Clinical Reports
Cancellation
General anesthesia
Surgery
author_facet Yoko Hori
Ayami Nakayama
Atsuhiro Sakamoto
author_sort Yoko Hori
title Surgery cancellations after entering the operating room
title_short Surgery cancellations after entering the operating room
title_full Surgery cancellations after entering the operating room
title_fullStr Surgery cancellations after entering the operating room
title_full_unstemmed Surgery cancellations after entering the operating room
title_sort surgery cancellations after entering the operating room
publisher SpringerOpen
series JA Clinical Reports
issn 2363-9024
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Abstract Background Surgery cancellation results in unavailability of the operating room and loss time. We identified the frequency of and reasons for operation cancellations after patients entered the operating room and assessed the preventability of such cancellations. Findings A retrospective chart review of all scheduled surgical procedures proposed under general anesthesia in a period spanning 2008 to 2016 was performed, and the reasons for cancellation were assessed. A total of 30 surgery procedures were cancelled after the patient had entered the operation room and preparation for general anesthesia had been completed. Ten of 18 cases (55.6%) that were cancelled before general anesthesia induction could have been prevented, accounting for 36.7% of the overall cancellations. The majority of the cancellations after anesthesia were due to the patients’ health status. Conclusions Improving the systems for checking patients’ medical problems and performing preoperative evaluations can reduce the number of cancellations after the patient has entered the operating room.
topic Cancellation
General anesthesia
Surgery
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40981-016-0066-1
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