Gregory McConnell (barhead03)
Twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) is a condition that results in unbalanced blood flow between two fetuses. Patients diagnosed with TTTS can experience maternal or fetal morbidity and mortality. Depending on the severity of TTTS, laser ablation of placental anastomoses may be the most effective treatment. The preferred treatment method requires percutaneous entry to the uterus; however, some patient circumstances (eg, placenta location) require a laparoscopic-assisted procedure. During the preoperative appointments, clinicians assess the condition of the fetuses and patients may participate in genetic counseling. Intraoperative care involves an interdisciplinary team that may include a pediatric general surgeon, maternal-fetal medicine specialists, an RN circulator, a scrub person, and an anesthesia professional. Perioperative nurses should have knowledge of the pathophysiology of TTTS, including its natural progression. They also should understand preoperative and intraoperative patient care requirements to provide safe and effective care for patients undergoing laparoscopic-assisted fetoscopic placental laser photocoagulation procedures.Surgical site infections (SSIs) negatively affect patients and health care organizations. check details We conducted a descriptive, correlational study at two hospitals that provide care to rural patients in one Midwestern state. The study purposes were to describe types of organisms causing reportable organ/space SSIs that occurred within 30 days of an open or a laparoscopic abdominal surgery (N = 20), and commonalities in patient- and care-related factors to provide baseline information for site-level prevention efforts for quality improvement. We identified Escherichia coli in almost half of the SSI cases (n = 9, 45%). Common patient-related factors included ethnicity, smoking, and dirty or contaminated wounds. Common care-related factors included longer surgery times (> 60 minutes), unplanned surgeries, and procedures that involved the colon or small bowel. Personnel can use site-level data to monitor prevalent types of organisms causing SSIs, enabling an evidence-based, interdisciplinary approach to develop and test methods to enhance prevention.Operating rooms are dynamic places with a lot of movement and people working as a concerted team. Operating room traffic can be necessary (eg, retrieving an unusual supply) or unnecessary (eg, a social visit). This quality improvement project aimed to reduce the amount of OR traffic to only necessary traffic and reduce the surgical site infection rates for the orthopedic ORs in a northern California community hospital. There were three principle interventions door signs discouraging traffic, staff member relief in batches, and preference card review for accuracy. During the six-week post-intervention period, there were no reported surgical site infections for orthopedic procedures, and the standardized infection ratio decreased from 1.75 to 0 in 10 weeks. Operating room traffic decreased after implementation by 46.9%. The number of door openings per minute decreased from 1.96 per minute to 1.04 per minute at the project's conclusion. Staff members' awareness of OR traffic increased. Shared decision-making is advocated as a key component of patient-centred care and associated with many benefits that improve patient outcomes. However, shared decision-making is not yet embedded in clinical practice and confronts many barriers that hinder its implementation especially in countries of the World Health Organization (WHO) Eastern Mediterranean Region. We conducted a systematic review to identify and understand factors influencing shared decision-making in the Region. We searched PsycINFO, CINAHL, PubMed, Medline, Scopus and Saudi Digital Library for articles published between January 1997 and February 2019. Studies conducted in the Region that reported barriers, facilitators, experiences, expectations and atti