Letter to the EditorThe WHO Surgical Safety Checklist: are we measuring up?
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The author has no conflict of interest to report.
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Cited by (16)
Collaborative quality improvement in surgery
2014, Hand ClinicsCitation Excerpt :For example, in 2008, the World Health Organization created a checklist of perioperative safety measures. These instruments can be reviewed by individuals perioperatively to ensure that best practices are being followed, or at least considered.10–12 Although the use of safety checklists is associated with measurable declines in perioperative complications and morbidity, a causal relationship between checklists and improvement in quality remains unclear.
What are we reading? A study of downloaded and cited articles from the British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in 2010
2011, British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial SurgeryCitation Excerpt :No case reports were featured, and there was only one short communication.51 We analysed the 50 most cited papers that were published in 2009–2010 and cited in 2010.4,9,11,15,16,21,29,42,44,47,52–91 A leading article on neck dissection published in January 2009 had seven citations, the highest number for a single paper published in BJOMS during 2009–2010.4
Adaptation of airline crew resource management principles to dentistry
2010, Journal of the American Dental AssociationCitation Excerpt :In addition, checklists for identical airplanes differ from airline to airline, yet they accomplish the same goal. Similarly, dental professionals should recognize that although the specific checklists will evolve continuously to accommodate changes, it is the consistent use of the checklist that remains constant.39 In this report, we introduced the concept of CRM as it relates to dentistry.
Attitudes and beliefs about the surgical safety checklist: Just another tick box?
2016, Canadian Journal of SurgeryCitation Excerpt :They administered a pre- and post-SSC implementation questionnaire and found that implementation of the SSC led to overall significant improvement in the perceptions of effective communication regarding equipment needs and availability, critical events or anticipated difficulties during the operation, and surgical team debriefing for patient recovery and postoperative management. Most studies report an overall compliance with the SSC between 38% and 96% in developed countries.21,26–29 These rates are concordant with the qualitative experience in Calgary, as interviewees reported using some version of the SSC for almost all procedures.
Achieving flying colours in surgical safety: Audit of World Health Organization 'Surgical Safety Checklist' compliance
2012, Journal of Laryngology and Otology