A Smarter Way to Clean ORs

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Spot checks and staff synergy improve surface cleaning and help speed room turnovers.


Victoria Hornbeck, RN, BSN, CNOR, was recently put in charge of reimagining the between-case cleaning of orthopedic operating rooms at Northside Hospital Forsyth in Cumming, Ga., and used adenosine triphosphate (ATP) testing of high-touch surfaces to identify gaps in the process. The gap she discovered in the hospital’s cleaning protocol had nothing to do with allowing enough time for surface disinfectants to dry. It didn’t involve staff forgetting to clean certain surfaces. It was, believe it or not, about the amount of elbow grease staff applied while wiping down rooms between cases.

“The testing of high-touch surfaces revealed staff had to go over some areas two or three times to get them clean,” says Ms. Hornbeck, the hospital’s quality improvement and nurse clinician of surgical services. “They don’t often think about how much friction they’re applying during cleaning. That’s certainly not something we would have considered without the testing.”

ATP testing involves zigzagging a swab over a 4-inch by 4-inch surface area and placing the swab into a luminator, which tests for the presence of ATP and provides the results in relative light units (RLUs). ATP is the molecule cells use to survive and its presence indicates microbial activity — and shows the tested surface had not been decontaminated. Ms. Hornbeck used the evidence-based threshold of 100 RLUs to determine the cleanliness of OR surfaces; areas that exceeding that threshold were recleaned and retested until a “clean” reading was achieved.

The luminator automatically inputs the results of each test into an electronic database, which clinical managers use to track and monitor results and identify areas of needed improvement. ATP testing is a way to identify cleaning practices based on empirical data and present the results to staff.

Ms. Hornbeck also posts the results on quality improvement bulletin boards and discusses them at departmental meetings. The key, she says, is to keep staff informed of gaps in the cleaning process so they can address and correct them in real time.

Ms. Hornbeck says trace amounts of bioburden can accumulate on surfaces throughout successive room turnovers despite staff turning over the rooms according to the facility’s surface cleaning protocols. That’s why instead of testing the staff’s cleaning performance between every case, she has staff swab surfaces after the last procedure to test the cumulative results of the staff’s cleaning efforts.

“Testing should be as unobtrusive as possible because fast turnover times are important in high-volume facilities,” says Ms. Hornbeck. “Results can be obtained in a matter of minutes, but we didn’t feel it was practical to ask staff to swab surfaces throughout the day.”

It’s also important to keep staff on their toes. To ensure surgical staff members can’t focus on cleaning where they know they’ll be tested, swab five randomly selected surfaces from a list of high-touch and potentially problematic areas. At Northside Hospital, that list includes back tables, computer keyboards, Mayo stands, brake handles on the surgical bed and knobs on anesthesia machines. 

Ms. Hornbeck suggests making cleaning improvement projects staff-driven initiatives instead of top-down mandates. That way, the staff members who are doing the cleaning are engaged in the process and feel empowered to do it correctly. It’s also impossible to directly supervise the cleaning of every OR between every case, so staff must take full responsibility in ensuring all surfaces are covered during turnovers.

Staff are motivated by the results of ATP testing if the findings are presented in the context of being accountable for patient safety, according to Ms. Hornbeck. She found the need to retest and reclean surfaces decreased in orthopedic ORs following the friction-focused educational efforts.

The staff-driven testing initiative at Northside Hospital has been expanded since being launched in the ORs; staff now test other high-touch surfaces throughout the perioperative department.  “Intrinsic motivation was an important factor is this initiative,” says Ms. Hornbeck. “Our team has taken ownership in the process improvement, and that’s been awesome to see.”

Timesaving tips

FAST AND FURIOUS Staff should wipe down surfaces quickly and with enough friction to remove residual bacteria.  |  Pamela Bevelhymer

The fast pace of room turnovers often leads to miscommunication about which team members are responsible for cleaning specific surfaces and assumptions about which areas have already been wiped down. Assign individual staff members to clean specific quadrants of the OR — around the table, the anesthesia workstation, near the back table, in front of supply cabinets — to keep the turnover’s efforts organized and ensure all areas are cleaned, according to Sandy Gallegos, BSN, RN, CNOR, director of surgical services at Methodist Hospital Metropolitan in San Antonio.

She suggests keeping a set of laminated task cards within each room. When staff members show up to pitch in, they grab the next card in the stack and follow its directives. The turnover isn’t finished until each card has been pulled and completed.

Ensuring supplies and instrument sets are in the room on time requires a coordinated effort among members of the surgical, sterile processing and supply chain teams. “The team members should meet at the end of each day to review the next day’s schedule and ensure the items needed for each scheduled case are available,” says Ms. Gallegos.

Ms. Hornbeck suggests using surface cleaning wipes with a short dwell time instead of sprays, which take additional time to apply. “Our infection preventionists have done an excellent job of finding products that disinfect surfaces in one minute, which have been extremely helpful in our efforts to improve room turnovers,” says Ms. Hornbeck. Her staff also employs turnover kits — which contain two-piece bed covers and armboard covers, a disposable patient safety strap, clean trash bags and bags for kick buckets — to get the room ready for the next case as quickly as possible.

Efficient room turnovers ultimately require an all-hands-on-deck mentality. “We make it clear that there is no hierarchy among members of our surgical staff,” says Ms. Gallegos. “All available team members are expected to help clean ORs and turn over rooms for the next case.” OSM

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