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Systematic review and meta-analysis of the effect of the World Health Organization surgical safety checklist on postoperative complications

机译:系统审查和荟萃分析世界卫生组织手术安全核对表术后并发症的效果

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摘要

Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) surgical safety checklist (SSC) was introduced to improve the safety of surgical procedures. This systematic review evaluated current evidence regarding the effectiveness of this checklist in reducing postoperative complications. Methods: The Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, Embase and CINAHL were searched using predefined inclusion criteria. The systematic review included all original articles reporting a quantitative measure of the effect of the WHO SSC on postoperative complications. Data were extracted for postoperative complications reported in at least two studies. A meta-analysis was conducted to quantify the effect of the WHO SSC on any complication, surgical-site infection (SSI) and mortality. Yule's Q contingency coefficient was used as a measure of the association between effectiveness and adherence with the checklist. Results: Seven of 723 studies identified met the inclusion criteria. There was marked methodological heterogeneity among studies. The impact on six clinical outcomes was reported in at least two studies. A meta-analysis was performed for three main outcomes (any complication, mortality and SSI). Risk ratios for any complication, mortality and SSI were 0·59 (95 per cent confidence interval 0·47 to 0·74), 0·77 (0·60 to 0·98) and 0·57 (0·41 to 0·79) respectively. There was a strong correlation between a significant decrease in postoperative complications and adherence to aspects of care embedded in the checklist (Q = 0·82; P = 0·042). Conclusion: The evidence is highly suggestive of a reduction in postoperative complications and mortality following implementation of the WHO SSC, but cannot be regarded as definitive in the absence of higher-quality studies. Saves lives
机译:背景:介绍了世界卫生组织(世卫组织)手术安全检查表(SSC)以提高外科手术的安全性。该系统审查评估了关于该清单在减少术后并发症方面的有效性的现有证据。方法:使用预定义的纳入标准搜索Cochrane库,Medline,Embase和Cinahl。系统审查包括所有原始文章,报告了世界卫生组织SSC在术后并发症的效果的定量衡量标题。提取数据以在至少两项研究中报告的术后并发症。进行了META分析以量化WHO SSC对任何并发症,外科遗址感染(SSI)和死亡率的影响。 Yule的Q应变系数被用作有效性和依从性与清单之间的关联的衡量标准。结果:723项研究中的七项确定了符合纳入标准。研究中有明显的方法是异质性。至少有两项研究报告了对六种临床结果的影响。进行三种主要结果(任何并发症,死亡率和SSI)进行META分析。任何并发症,死亡率和SSI的风险比为0·59(95%零距离0·47至0·74),0·77(0·60至0·98)和0·57(0·41到0 ·79)分别。术后并发症的显着降低与嵌入清单中的护理方面的显着降低之间存在强烈的相关性(Q = 0·82; p = 0·042)。结论:证据表明术后并发症和死亡率降低的暗示性,在执行世界卫生组织的SSC后,但不能被视为在没有更高质量的研究的情况下视为明确。挽救生命

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  • 来源
    《The British Journal of Surgery》 |2014年第3期|共9页
  • 作者单位

    Department of Patient Safety and Health Economics Faculty of Business Economics Hasselt;

    Patient Safety Group Faculty of Medicine and Life Sciences Hasselt University Hasselt Belgium;

    Department of Patient Safety and Health Economics Faculty of Business Economics Hasselt;

    Department of Patient Safety and Health Economics Faculty of Business Economics Hasselt;

    ICURO Kliniek St Jan Brussels Belgium;

    Operating Theatre Imelda Hospital Bonheiden Belgium;

    Department of Anaesthesiology Kliniek St Jan Brussels Belgium;

    Department of Surgery AZ Maria Middelares Ghent Belgium;

    Department of Patient Safety and Health Economics Faculty of Business Economics Hasselt;

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  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 外科学;
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