The Operating Room (OR) is the heart of any surgical hospital and it is the place where the most dangerous accidents can rarely occur either to the patients or to the operating team. Post-surgical infection is one of the most important complications, in particular in Ortho-paedic surgery. A new aspect of the life in the OR is the personal protection of the staff: the OR is now under the severe regulation of the legislation regarding the safety in workplace. The rule of the 5 D’s according to Joubert, the historical key-stone in the strategy of the fight against infection, can be still adopted in the more complex fight against OR errors for a good quality of life for patient and personnel: 1. Discipline, 2.Design,3. D evices, 4. D efence mechanism of the patient, 5. D rugs. The first three of these are the subject of this article. Discipline is a critical issue, as it has the capacity of decreasing the efficacy of other factors. It concerns the personnel and the patients, independently from the hierarchy, sex and job. Discipline must be considered a fundamental instrument for reducing the risk of infections related to surgery and for increasing the personal safety of each member of the operating team. Many points are discussed and the European directives men- tion: protocols and checklists, surgical team and risk management and the preparation of the personnel from the surgical hand washing to the clothing, gowns and masks. Secondly, the building regulations for the ideal operating block and OR must be followed according to the actual regulations; the need to renovate old operating blocks and to adopt strategies, also in organisation, are discussed. The development of surgery, including Day and Week-End Surgeries, and of many new devices, and consequently of the need for more space, more instruments and more expert staff, are presented. Thirdly, the ventilation and controlled- contamination air-conditioning systems (VCCAC) are presented, considering the classification of the level of air cleanliness, the risk of contamination due to chemical agents, the air changes, the thermal comfort conditions and technical aspects such as the pressure, noise and the recovery time. The main difference from the past is that now a complete programme of risk manage- ment, checklists, protocols, group management and European directives have a role rather than the old “good sense” surgical practices.

Operating Theatres and Avoidance of Surgical Sepsis / Gallinaro, Paolo; Brach del Prever, Elena Maria; Bistolfi, Alessandro; Odasso, Antonio; Bo, Matteo; Masoero, Marco Carlo - In: European Surgical Orthopaedics and Traumatology / George Bentley. - [s.l] : Springer, 2014. - ISBN 978-3-642-34745-0. - pp. 63-76 [10.1007/978-3-642-34746-7_220]

Operating Theatres and Avoidance of Surgical Sepsis

MASOERO, Marco Carlo
2014

Abstract

The Operating Room (OR) is the heart of any surgical hospital and it is the place where the most dangerous accidents can rarely occur either to the patients or to the operating team. Post-surgical infection is one of the most important complications, in particular in Ortho-paedic surgery. A new aspect of the life in the OR is the personal protection of the staff: the OR is now under the severe regulation of the legislation regarding the safety in workplace. The rule of the 5 D’s according to Joubert, the historical key-stone in the strategy of the fight against infection, can be still adopted in the more complex fight against OR errors for a good quality of life for patient and personnel: 1. Discipline, 2.Design,3. D evices, 4. D efence mechanism of the patient, 5. D rugs. The first three of these are the subject of this article. Discipline is a critical issue, as it has the capacity of decreasing the efficacy of other factors. It concerns the personnel and the patients, independently from the hierarchy, sex and job. Discipline must be considered a fundamental instrument for reducing the risk of infections related to surgery and for increasing the personal safety of each member of the operating team. Many points are discussed and the European directives men- tion: protocols and checklists, surgical team and risk management and the preparation of the personnel from the surgical hand washing to the clothing, gowns and masks. Secondly, the building regulations for the ideal operating block and OR must be followed according to the actual regulations; the need to renovate old operating blocks and to adopt strategies, also in organisation, are discussed. The development of surgery, including Day and Week-End Surgeries, and of many new devices, and consequently of the need for more space, more instruments and more expert staff, are presented. Thirdly, the ventilation and controlled- contamination air-conditioning systems (VCCAC) are presented, considering the classification of the level of air cleanliness, the risk of contamination due to chemical agents, the air changes, the thermal comfort conditions and technical aspects such as the pressure, noise and the recovery time. The main difference from the past is that now a complete programme of risk manage- ment, checklists, protocols, group management and European directives have a role rather than the old “good sense” surgical practices.
2014
978-3-642-34745-0
European Surgical Orthopaedics and Traumatology
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2681731
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