Hospital operating room leaders should create protocols for tissue recovery that have clearly defined expectations in order to ensure patient safety and a clean surgical environment, according to a study published in the AORN Journal.
The authors suggest that the tissue recovery team be asked to work in an OR that is not set up for a next-day procedure to avoid the possibility of disturbing or contaminating any equipment.
Read the study published in the AORN Journal on tissue recovery protocols in the OR.
How Preoperative Preparation Can Drive OR Performance
A Lean Machine: How Lean Methodology Can Streamline OR Processes
The authors suggest that the tissue recovery team be asked to work in an OR that is not set up for a next-day procedure to avoid the possibility of disturbing or contaminating any equipment.
Read the study published in the AORN Journal on tissue recovery protocols in the OR.
Related Articles on OR Efficiency:
Study: OR Crisis Checklist Improves Safety, ManagementHow Preoperative Preparation Can Drive OR Performance
A Lean Machine: How Lean Methodology Can Streamline OR Processes