ECRI Institute’s “Top 10 Health Technology Hazards for 2017”: Part 1
ECRI Institute is an independent, nonprofit research organization that researches the best approaches to improving patient care. Since 1971, ECRI Institute has been producing publications (i.e., Health Devices), reports and materials to help improve the effectiveness, safety, and economy of health services.1
Through its comparative equipment evaluations, product ratings, patient safety alerts, and guidance articles, Health Devices provides independent, objective judgment for selecting, purchasing, managing, and using medical devices, equipment, and systems.2
Produced each year by ECRI Institute’s Health Devices Group, the “Top 10 Health Technology Hazards for 2017” list identifies potential sources of danger that warrant the greatest attention by healthcare personnel for the year and offers practical, proven recommendations for reducing those risks and improving patient outcomes. The list reflects the collective judgment of ECRI’s management team about which risks should receive immediate priority. All the items on the list represent problems that can be avoided or risks that can be minimized with the careful management of technologies, personnel and training. The 2017 “Top 10 Hazards” are:
- Infusion Errors Can Be Deadly If Simple Safety Steps Are Overlooked
- Inadequate Cleaning of Complex Reusable Instruments Can Lead to Infections (This was #8 on the list just 2 years ago)
- Missed Ventilator Alarms Can Lead to Patient Harm
- Undetected Opioid-Induced Respiratory Depression
- Infection Risks with Heater-Cooler Devices Used in Cardiothoracic Surgery
- Software Management Gaps Put Patients, and Patient Data, at Risk
- Occupational Radiation Hazards in Hybrid ORs
- Automated Dispensing Cabinet Setup and Use Errors May Cause Medication Mishaps
- Surgical Stapler Misuse and Malfunctions
- Device Failures Caused by Cleaning Products and Practices
- Verify that both (a) staff responsible for precleaning at the point of use and (b) reprocessing staff have ready access to reprocessing instructions (IFUs) for the instruments they will encounter.
- For complex instruments in particular—that is, for instruments featuring difficult-to-clean components such as lumens, hinges, cannulated blades, stopcocks, or O-rings—confirm that the reprocessing instructions are comprehensive. This documentation should include:
- Instructions for precleaning the instrument immediately after use.
- Information about any special accessories required for cleaning.
- Information about compatible cleaning agents.
- Instructions for disassembly and reassembly, if applicable (including photos or diagrams).
- Information about the expected time required for each cleaning step.
- When reprocessing instructions lack this information, contact the manufacturer and request the information needed. If the manufacturer is unable to provide the information, consider purchasing alternative instruments when replacement is required.
December 22, 2017
5 view(s) 