The activities in the Prepare phase lay the foundation for the work you are about to undertake. As with any other significant project, well-organized planning and careful consideration of your goals are essential for success. This phase is about understanding what the checklist tool is and how it works, examining what is going on currently in your facility, and committing to the work that will be required to make the checklist effective in your facility.
A facility's culture is usually assessed with a culture survey that asks target audiences to respond to a set of questions about how they feel about various aspects of their work and work environment. The survey may be a paper questionnaire or a Web-based electronic form. We recommend using the ASC SOPS and supplemental materials as discussed earlier in this guide.
Culture surveys are commonly used in hospitals and other medical environments to measure workplace conditions and employee attitudes. Many surveys used to measure culture more broadly in hospitals are not customized enough to inform checklist implementation efforts in the operating/procedure room, and therefore the ASC SOPS is recommended. It is important that your culture survey captures responses from a representative sample of surgical team members. In some facilities, physician response rates can be quite low. If you do not get responses from a majority of the physicians working in your operating/procedure rooms, leveraging the results for the checklist implementation will be more difficult.
General Guidelines for Administering the Survey
General Advice for Sharing Culture Survey Results
The implementation team is a multidisciplinary group of people responsible for planning and executing the checklist initiative. Each member of the team will share responsibility for successful implementation and use of the surgical safety checklist in your facility. The team should include representatives from each role on the surgical team. If possible, the team should include an administrator or representative from your quality improvement program. Team members need to be enthusiastic, respected, and committed. Use one-on-one conversations to recruit people for your team (Appendix A). Consider using Your First Checklist Meeting Guide (Appendix B) as a sample agenda for your first meeting. Once your team is in place, meet regularly every 2 weeks, even if certain members are unable to attend. Meetings may be less frequent after the initial planning and once the checklist has been expanded in operating/procedure rooms.
It is important to find a physician and an anesthesia professional who can participate on the team and will champion the checklist work with their peers. Try to find physicians who already emulate some of the desired behavior in the operating/procedure room (e.g., may already be sharing an operative plan or leading a debrief). When initiating the checklist conversation with your physician, use the Addressing Physician Concerns tool (Appendix C). The active participation of a physician champion is a key indicator for implementation success. The support of "formal" leadership is necessary, but those leaders are often not the ones who should guide this effort directly because their availability is limited, and their formal position may influence the interactions of the team.
Ideas for change that come from outside an organization are often treated as suspect (not relevant, unproven, too cumbersome, not "for us," etc.)—which makes those ideas easy to ignore or dismiss. Because health care facilities are subject to so many mandates from accrediting bodies, government regulators, and payers, fatigue or even outright hostility to outside ideas can be a real barrier to improvement. In the Own phase, you address this tendency by making sure your checklist initiative is driven from within your facility and by your teams, and supported by your leadership. Work with members of your team to customize the checklist to fit the needs of your patients and facility (Appendix D, Appendix E, and Appendix F).
Some facilities feel pressure to put the checklist into their operating/procedure rooms immediately, but rushing the process invites serious risks. If you ask surgical teams to use the checklist in an operating/procedure room before they are ready, you can undermine the teams' confidence in the checklist as an effective communication and safety tool and can undermine their confidence in your implementation team. We recommend that you test your checklist in a simulation prior to implementing it throughout your facility. This gives your team an opportunity to practice it, reflect on what went well and what needs to change, and make modifications to the checklist if needed (Appendix G, and Appendix I).
Have conversations, publicize the changes you are planning to make, and engage all team members. Start training team members on how to use the checklist (Appendix G), and work with team members to perform a tabletop simulation of checklist use before bringing it into the operating or procedure room. Next, start monitoring checklist use. Performing observations can often reveal weaknesses in checklist performance that might otherwise go unnoticed. The Checklist Observation Tool (Appendix I) allows you to collect information regarding the processes performed in the operating room or procedure room in order to improve surgical outcomes.
The Expand phase encompasses steps for actually putting your checklist into use in operating/procedure rooms throughout your facility. When done well, expansion is a slowly building process that is carefully managed so that each member of every surgical team is properly trained, each team receives supportive coaching, and feedback from team members is incorporated. This is when the preparation and planning you have done in earlier steps pays off.
Coaching is part of a learning progression that begins with a one-on-one conversation and continues with hands-on training. It is a vital part of every successful implementation because it helps lead individuals and teams to better performance and helps sustain effective checklist use over time. In this step, your goal is to coach all teams at least once shortly after they begin using the checklist in real cases and to coach them multiple times whenever possible. Coaching starts with an observation of a team in the operating/procedure room. The coach/observer pays close attention to what is going on: watching the team and how they perform the items on the checklist and listening to their conversations and questions (Appendix J).
At this point, your team has put a great deal of effort into telling people about the checklist, raising its profile, talking to people individually, and training and coaching them on proper checklist use. Throughout the implementation period, the checklist has received a great deal of attention. You now face a different challenge: how to sustain the work and improve it over time. As you turn to the next problem to be addressed in the operating/procedure room, whether it's redosing of antibiotics or updating the skin prep to the latest protocol, your attention shifts, and the checklist work might start to slide a bit. This step encompasses the variety of tasks that need to continue in your facility so that, over time, people feel that using the checklist effectively "is just the way that we do the work here."
Over time, your team will continue to—
One-on-one conversations are used to engage surgical team members in enhancing their use of the surgical safety checklist or can be used in a quality improvement effort to engage physicians and staff. This example spreadsheet can be used when having one-on-one conversations with everyone who works in your facility. The spreadsheet can help track who needs to receive a one-on-one conversation and which member of the implementation team is responsible for talking about each problem.
This is a sample agenda with topics you should consider discussing when your implementation team meets for the first time to discuss the checklist project.
It is important to have one-on-one conversations with physicians about implementing the checklist in your facility. This document contains common concerns you may hear from physicians about the checklist and some examples of responses you can use to address these concerns.
This checklist template is based on the World Health Organization (WHO) Surgical Safety Checklist and has been modified for use in ambulatory surgery centers. It is recommended that you use this template and modify it to fit with the workflow in your facility.
This checklist template is intended to be used in endoscopy centers. We recommend you use this template and modify it to fit with the workflow in your facility.
When making modifications to your checklist, review this document with your checklist implementation team to ensure that your checklist meets the goals of the original WHO Surgical Safety Checklist.
This sheet is helpful to read before expanding checklist use in your facility. It covers necessary things to consider when teaching staff how to use the checklist as well as unique ways to train team members.
Appendix H. Tabletop Simulation Videos
Tabletop simulations are used to do dry "run-throughs" before adopting full implementation of procedures.
Monitoring checklist use is an extremely important part of this project. Performing observations can often reveal weaknesses in checklist performance that may otherwise go unnoticed. This tool allows you to collect information regarding the processes performed in the operating room or procedure room to improve surgical outcomes.
This tool can help you observe teams in your operating/procedure rooms and coach them on what they did well or what they can improve. It is similar to the observation tool, with the difference being that you will now be asked to make some notes and coach teams based on what you watched in the operating/procedure room using the three-part question.
These documents were created to assist the completion of a quality improvement study for the purposes of an accreditation survey. The quality improvement framework document includes an example of implementing one component of the surgical safety checklist, but can be used for any quality improvement project.