A Survey of Current Procurement Travel Practices, Accident Frequency, and Perceptions of Safety
Background. In 2018, 81% of the 36, 529 solid organs transplanted in the United States came from deceased donors. These organs were recovered through widespread use of aeromedical and emergency ground transportation systems. Urgently scheduled travel to remote hospitals at night and in varied weathe...
Main Authors: | , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Wolters Kluwer
2019-10-01
|
Series: | Transplantation Direct |
Online Access: | http://journals.lww.com/transplantationdirect/fulltext/10.1097/TXD.0000000000000942 |
id |
doaj-8fa3fbb015464e59a998204bd7e42d7f |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-8fa3fbb015464e59a998204bd7e42d7f2020-11-25T03:36:33ZengWolters KluwerTransplantation Direct2373-87312019-10-01510e49410.1097/TXD.0000000000000942201910000-00009A Survey of Current Procurement Travel Practices, Accident Frequency, and Perceptions of SafetyAustin D. Schenk, MD, PhD0William K. Washburn, MD1Andrew B. Adams, MD, PhD2Raymond J. Lynch, MD31 The Ohio State University Comprehensive Transplant Center, Columbus, OH.1 The Ohio State University Comprehensive Transplant Center, Columbus, OH.2 Emory University Transplant Center, Atlanta, GA.2 Emory University Transplant Center, Atlanta, GA.Background. In 2018, 81% of the 36, 529 solid organs transplanted in the United States came from deceased donors. These organs were recovered through widespread use of aeromedical and emergency ground transportation systems. Urgently scheduled travel to remote hospitals at night and in varied weather conditions carries risk for the transplant professionals involved. A landmark survey conducted in 2007 demonstrated that 80% of respondents had experienced a “near-miss” event while on a procurement trip, and 15% had been involved in at least 1 accident. One decade later, we sought to revisit the issue of procurement related travel safety. Methods. A 32 question survey designed to interrogate travel practice, accident frequency, and perceptions of safety was sent to the American Society of Transplant Surgeons membership. Results. Our survey response rate was 20.6%. At least 1 travel accident with bodily injury was reported by 23% of respondents and yet only 7% of respondents reported feeling “unsafe” or “very unsafe” during procurement travel. Sixteen percent of respondents participated in a procurement at a dedicated organ procurement facility, and only 53% of procurement surgeons completed at least 1 deceased donor procurement at their own hospital facility within the preceding 12 months. Conclusions. In a field where increasingly aggressive organ utilization is the norm, the efficiency and safety of procurement travel merits ongoing consideration. Addressing these concerns takes on new significance as organ allocation policies change geographic distribution to expand the extent of travel required for surgical teams.http://journals.lww.com/transplantationdirect/fulltext/10.1097/TXD.0000000000000942 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Austin D. Schenk, MD, PhD William K. Washburn, MD Andrew B. Adams, MD, PhD Raymond J. Lynch, MD |
spellingShingle |
Austin D. Schenk, MD, PhD William K. Washburn, MD Andrew B. Adams, MD, PhD Raymond J. Lynch, MD A Survey of Current Procurement Travel Practices, Accident Frequency, and Perceptions of Safety Transplantation Direct |
author_facet |
Austin D. Schenk, MD, PhD William K. Washburn, MD Andrew B. Adams, MD, PhD Raymond J. Lynch, MD |
author_sort |
Austin D. Schenk, MD, PhD |
title |
A Survey of Current Procurement Travel Practices, Accident Frequency, and Perceptions of Safety |
title_short |
A Survey of Current Procurement Travel Practices, Accident Frequency, and Perceptions of Safety |
title_full |
A Survey of Current Procurement Travel Practices, Accident Frequency, and Perceptions of Safety |
title_fullStr |
A Survey of Current Procurement Travel Practices, Accident Frequency, and Perceptions of Safety |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Survey of Current Procurement Travel Practices, Accident Frequency, and Perceptions of Safety |
title_sort |
survey of current procurement travel practices, accident frequency, and perceptions of safety |
publisher |
Wolters Kluwer |
series |
Transplantation Direct |
issn |
2373-8731 |
publishDate |
2019-10-01 |
description |
Background. In 2018, 81% of the 36, 529 solid organs transplanted in the United States came from deceased donors. These organs were recovered through widespread use of aeromedical and emergency ground transportation systems. Urgently scheduled travel to remote hospitals at night and in varied weather conditions carries risk for the transplant professionals involved. A landmark survey conducted in 2007 demonstrated that 80% of respondents had experienced a “near-miss” event while on a procurement trip, and 15% had been involved in at least 1 accident. One decade later, we sought to revisit the issue of procurement related travel safety.
Methods. A 32 question survey designed to interrogate travel practice, accident frequency, and perceptions of safety was sent to the American Society of Transplant Surgeons membership.
Results. Our survey response rate was 20.6%. At least 1 travel accident with bodily injury was reported by 23% of respondents and yet only 7% of respondents reported feeling “unsafe” or “very unsafe” during procurement travel. Sixteen percent of respondents participated in a procurement at a dedicated organ procurement facility, and only 53% of procurement surgeons completed at least 1 deceased donor procurement at their own hospital facility within the preceding 12 months.
Conclusions. In a field where increasingly aggressive organ utilization is the norm, the efficiency and safety of procurement travel merits ongoing consideration. Addressing these concerns takes on new significance as organ allocation policies change geographic distribution to expand the extent of travel required for surgical teams. |
url |
http://journals.lww.com/transplantationdirect/fulltext/10.1097/TXD.0000000000000942 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT austindschenkmdphd asurveyofcurrentprocurementtravelpracticesaccidentfrequencyandperceptionsofsafety AT williamkwashburnmd asurveyofcurrentprocurementtravelpracticesaccidentfrequencyandperceptionsofsafety AT andrewbadamsmdphd asurveyofcurrentprocurementtravelpracticesaccidentfrequencyandperceptionsofsafety AT raymondjlynchmd asurveyofcurrentprocurementtravelpracticesaccidentfrequencyandperceptionsofsafety AT austindschenkmdphd surveyofcurrentprocurementtravelpracticesaccidentfrequencyandperceptionsofsafety AT williamkwashburnmd surveyofcurrentprocurementtravelpracticesaccidentfrequencyandperceptionsofsafety AT andrewbadamsmdphd surveyofcurrentprocurementtravelpracticesaccidentfrequencyandperceptionsofsafety AT raymondjlynchmd surveyofcurrentprocurementtravelpracticesaccidentfrequencyandperceptionsofsafety |
_version_ |
1724549462875963392 |