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Home NEWS Science News Health

Hospital deaths after surgery fall after launch of surgical safety checklists in Scotland

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
April 17, 2019
in Health
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Credit: British Journal of Surgery

The World Health Organization (WHO) created the Surgical Safety Checklist over a decade ago, in an effort to reduce mortality after surgery. The BJS (British Journal of Surgery) has published a study that used a national database to look at the records of over 12 million patients. The authors were interested in the numbers of deaths before and after the launch of the checklist in Scotland. They found that there were a third fewer deaths in patients who had undergone operations after the checklist was launched. The fall in death rates was seen only in patients who had surgery, not in patients treated for medical conditions during the same interval.

Jason Leitch, Scotland’s National Clinical Director, said “This is a significant study that highlights the reduction in surgical mortality over the last decade. While there are a number of factors that have contributed to this, it is clear from the research that the introduction of the WHO’s Surgical Safety Checklist in 2008 has played a key role. This decline in mortality has been achieved through the hard work of hundreds of people involved in the project across the NHS in Scotland, delivered under the Scottish Patient Safety Programme alongside a number of other surgical safety measures.”

Dr Atul Gawande, a study co-author who led the introduction of the Surgical Safety Checklist a decade ago and served as an advisor for the Scottish implementation effort, noted, “Scotland’s health system is to be congratulated for a multi-year effort that has produced some of the largest population-wide reductions in surgical deaths ever documented.”

###

Media Contact:

Suzanne Hart

Head of Health Communications, Scottish Government

0131 244 2975 | 07815 492516

[email protected]

Media Contact
Penny Smith
[email protected]

Related Journal Article

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bjs.11151

Tags: Death/DyingMedicine/HealthMortality/LongevityPublic HealthSurgery
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