Still more to do to improve perioperative safety and prevent patient harm

Above all else, the raison d’être of the perioperative nurse is to maintain surgical asepsis and patient safety. However, despite all current efforts, there is still an unacceptably high number of our patients experiencing preventable adverse events. A recent systematic review found that 20 per cen...

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Main Author: Jed Duff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Australian College of Perioperative Nurses 2021-05-01
Series:Journal of Perioperative Nursing
Online Access:https://journal.acorn.org.au/index.php/jpn/article/view/190
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author Jed Duff
author_facet Jed Duff
author_sort Jed Duff
collection DOAJ
description Above all else, the raison d’être of the perioperative nurse is to maintain surgical asepsis and patient safety. However, despite all current efforts, there is still an unacceptably high number of our patients experiencing preventable adverse events. A recent systematic review found that 20 per cent of surgical patients are harmed during their hospital stay, with 50 per cent of these harms judged as wholly preventable1. This equates to approximately 200 000 Australian patients suffering injury or death each year because of unsafe and poor-quality surgical care.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2209-1084
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language English
publishDate 2021-05-01
publisher Australian College of Perioperative Nurses
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spelling doaj-art-17357219fdeb4df6a9ffd33eae3e92c02025-08-20T03:53:23ZengAustralian College of Perioperative NursesJournal of Perioperative Nursing2209-10842209-10922021-05-0134210.26550/2209-1092.1127Still more to do to improve perioperative safety and prevent patient harmJed Duff0Queensland University of Technology, Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital Above all else, the raison d’être of the perioperative nurse is to maintain surgical asepsis and patient safety. However, despite all current efforts, there is still an unacceptably high number of our patients experiencing preventable adverse events. A recent systematic review found that 20 per cent of surgical patients are harmed during their hospital stay, with 50 per cent of these harms judged as wholly preventable1. This equates to approximately 200 000 Australian patients suffering injury or death each year because of unsafe and poor-quality surgical care. https://journal.acorn.org.au/index.php/jpn/article/view/190
spellingShingle Jed Duff
Still more to do to improve perioperative safety and prevent patient harm
Journal of Perioperative Nursing
title Still more to do to improve perioperative safety and prevent patient harm
title_full Still more to do to improve perioperative safety and prevent patient harm
title_fullStr Still more to do to improve perioperative safety and prevent patient harm
title_full_unstemmed Still more to do to improve perioperative safety and prevent patient harm
title_short Still more to do to improve perioperative safety and prevent patient harm
title_sort still more to do to improve perioperative safety and prevent patient harm
url https://journal.acorn.org.au/index.php/jpn/article/view/190
work_keys_str_mv AT jedduff stillmoretodotoimproveperioperativesafetyandpreventpatientharm