Opinions of Operating Room Nurses Regarding Patient and Staff Safety in Operating Room

Objectives: Patient and staff safety is a crucial issue for the health agenda of all countries. Patient safety involves promoting the measures which ensure that mistakes are noted, reported and corrected before they affect patients and health workers. This descriptive study was conducted to determin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Çiğdem Canbolat Seyman, Sultan Ayaz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dicle University Medical School 2016-03-01
Series:Dicle Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.diclemedj.org/upload/sayi/59/Dicle%20Med%20J-02553.pdf
Description
Summary:Objectives: Patient and staff safety is a crucial issue for the health agenda of all countries. Patient safety involves promoting the measures which ensure that mistakes are noted, reported and corrected before they affect patients and health workers. This descriptive study was conducted to determine the opinions of operating room nurses re­garding patient and staff safety, as well as the factors that affect these opinions. Methods: This descriptive study was conducted in 2010 in the operating rooms of nine quality-certified public hos­pitals in Ankara. This study was applied to 100 operating room nurses. Data was collected through questionnaires. Results: Operating room nurses report that the operat­ing room engenders many risks towards patient and staff safety. The study shows that the three most frequent fac­tors which threaten patient safety are: risk of infection (50%), problems with the transport of patients (50%), and wrong-patient/wrong-side/wrong-operation (35%). This study also revealed that the threats to staff safety are: sharp and penetrating injuries (44%), exposure to diseas­es that spread through contact with blood, body fluid, or respiration (41%). Conclusion: Nurses reported a multitude of risks that af­fect patient and staff safety in the operating room. The most important of these are risk of infection and sharp, penetrating injuries.
ISSN:1300-2945
1308-9889