Can You Pass This Safety Quiz?

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From pressure injuries to wrong-site surgery, our experts look to stump seasoned surgical leaders.

Patient and staff safety are obvious core values of every surgical organization. Yet problems in this realm are ever-present, and less-than-stellar outcomes continue — sometimes despite decades of warnings and guidance that could help. Policies must be implemented, reviewed and refined on an ongoing basis, because all perioperative team members are human and mistakes are always possible. We’ve asked some of the nation’s top experts for their input on several key safety topics. Take the following quiz to see how your facility measures up in these critical areas.

1. Which of the following are essential elements of a proper preoperative baseline skin assessment?

  • a. A focused assessment on the area of the surgical incision.
  • b. Applying prophylactic dressings on areas of high risk/pressure points.
  • c. Allow patient to sit in chair or walk around the unit instead of laying on the gurney.
  • d. Documenting observations.
  • e. Repositioning q 30 minutes.
  • f. Relieving all pressure from identified red areas/pressure points and from expected sustained surgical position.
  • g. Consider use of subepidermal moisture monitoring for baseline on skin assessment.
  • Reveal

2. How many U.S. states have enacted surgical smoke evacuation legislation?

  • a. 9
  • b. 13
  • c. 17
  • d. 24
  • e. 35
  • Reveal

3. According to joint recommendations from the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) and the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation (APSF), how long after a patient’s COVID-19 infection should anesthesiologists and surgeons/proceduralists wait to conduct a risk assessment regarding their suitability for elective surgery?

  • a. 10 days
  • b. Two weeks
  • c. Two to seven weeks
  • d. Seven weeks
  • e. There is no longer a need for a waiting period
  • Reveal

4. During monopolar electrosurgery, a single-foil conductive return electrode is sufficient to engage the safety functions of a generator’s return electrode contact quality monitoring system (RECQM).

  • a. True
  • b. False

  • Reveal

5. The increase in minimally invasive procedures has resulted in a net reduction in incidences of unintentionally retained surgical items (URSIs) in recent years.

  • a. True
  • b. False
  • Reveal

6. Wrong-site errors are almost entirely preventable if protocols that include built-in redundancies are followed to the letter.

  • a. True
  • b. False
  • Reveal

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