A comparison between a maximum care university hospital and an outpatient clinic - potential for optimization in arthroscopic workflows?
Arthroscopy
Operating room management
Surgical process optimization
Surgical workflow analysis
Journal
BMC health services research
ISSN: 1472-6963
Titre abrégé: BMC Health Serv Res
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101088677
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
28 Nov 2023
28 Nov 2023
Historique:
received:
26
04
2023
accepted:
31
10
2023
medline:
30
11
2023
pubmed:
29
11
2023
entrez:
29
11
2023
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Due to the growing economic pressure, there is an increasing interest in the optimization of operational processes within surgical operating rooms (ORs). Surgical departments are frequently dealing with limited resources, complex processes with unexpected events as well as constantly changing conditions. In order to use available resources efficiently, existing workflows and processes have to be analyzed and optimized continuously. Structural and procedural changes without prior data-driven analyses may impair the performance of the OR team and the overall efficiency of the department. The aim of this study is to develop an adaptable software toolset for surgical workflow analysis and perioperative process optimization in arthroscopic surgery. In this study, the perioperative processes of arthroscopic interventions have been recorded and analyzed subsequently. A total of 53 arthroscopic operations were recorded at a maximum care university hospital (UH) and 66 arthroscopic operations were acquired at a special outpatient clinic (OC). The recording includes regular perioperative processes (i.a. patient positioning, skin incision, application of wound dressing) and disruptive influences on these processes (e.g. telephone calls, missing or defective instruments, etc.). For this purpose, a software tool was developed ('s.w.an Suite Arthroscopic toolset'). Based on the data obtained, the processes of the maximum care provider and the special outpatient clinic have been analyzed in terms of performance measures (e.g. Closure-To-Incision-Time), efficiency (e.g. activity duration, OR resource utilization) as well as intra-process disturbances and then compared to one another. Despite many similar processes, the results revealed considerable differences in performance indices. The OC required significantly less time than UH for surgical preoperative (UH: 30:47 min, OC: 26:01 min) and postoperative phase (UH: 15:04 min, OC: 9:56 min) as well as changeover time (UH: 32:33 min, OC: 6:02 min). In addition, these phases result in the Closure-to-Incision-Time, which lasted longer at the UH (UH: 80:01 min, OC: 41:12 min). The perioperative process organization, team collaboration, and the avoidance of disruptive factors had a considerable influence on the progress of the surgeries. Furthermore, differences in terms of staffing and spatial capacities could be identified. Based on the acquired process data (such as the duration for different surgical steps or the number of interfering events) and the comparison of different arthroscopic departments, approaches for perioperative process optimization to decrease the time of work steps and reduce disruptive influences were identified.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
Due to the growing economic pressure, there is an increasing interest in the optimization of operational processes within surgical operating rooms (ORs). Surgical departments are frequently dealing with limited resources, complex processes with unexpected events as well as constantly changing conditions. In order to use available resources efficiently, existing workflows and processes have to be analyzed and optimized continuously. Structural and procedural changes without prior data-driven analyses may impair the performance of the OR team and the overall efficiency of the department. The aim of this study is to develop an adaptable software toolset for surgical workflow analysis and perioperative process optimization in arthroscopic surgery.
METHODS
METHODS
In this study, the perioperative processes of arthroscopic interventions have been recorded and analyzed subsequently. A total of 53 arthroscopic operations were recorded at a maximum care university hospital (UH) and 66 arthroscopic operations were acquired at a special outpatient clinic (OC). The recording includes regular perioperative processes (i.a. patient positioning, skin incision, application of wound dressing) and disruptive influences on these processes (e.g. telephone calls, missing or defective instruments, etc.). For this purpose, a software tool was developed ('s.w.an Suite Arthroscopic toolset'). Based on the data obtained, the processes of the maximum care provider and the special outpatient clinic have been analyzed in terms of performance measures (e.g. Closure-To-Incision-Time), efficiency (e.g. activity duration, OR resource utilization) as well as intra-process disturbances and then compared to one another.
RESULTS
RESULTS
Despite many similar processes, the results revealed considerable differences in performance indices. The OC required significantly less time than UH for surgical preoperative (UH: 30:47 min, OC: 26:01 min) and postoperative phase (UH: 15:04 min, OC: 9:56 min) as well as changeover time (UH: 32:33 min, OC: 6:02 min). In addition, these phases result in the Closure-to-Incision-Time, which lasted longer at the UH (UH: 80:01 min, OC: 41:12 min).
CONCLUSION
CONCLUSIONS
The perioperative process organization, team collaboration, and the avoidance of disruptive factors had a considerable influence on the progress of the surgeries. Furthermore, differences in terms of staffing and spatial capacities could be identified. Based on the acquired process data (such as the duration for different surgical steps or the number of interfering events) and the comparison of different arthroscopic departments, approaches for perioperative process optimization to decrease the time of work steps and reduce disruptive influences were identified.
Identifiants
pubmed: 38017443
doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-10259-3
pii: 10.1186/s12913-023-10259-3
pmc: PMC10685488
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
1313Informations de copyright
© 2023. The Author(s).
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