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International Society of Surgery (ISS)
Société Internationale de Chirurgie (SIC)
Integrated Societies: IATSIC | IASMEN | BSI | ISDS
AUDIT OF OPERATIVE SITE MARKING PRACTICE IN A TERTIARY HOSPITAL IN NIGERIA: A KEY STEP IN PATIENT SAFETY
agbaje1@gmail.com
 
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Abstract Title
AUDIT OF OPERATIVE SITE MARKING PRACTICE IN A TERTIARY HOSPITAL IN NIGERIA: A KEY STEP IN PATIENT SAFETY
Author Details
No. of Authors
3
Including the presenting author
Author 1
Ademola Agbaje agbaje1@gmail.com Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospitals Complex Surgery Ile- Ife Nigeria *
Author 2
Adedayo Lawal adedayolawal91@gmail.com Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospitals Complex Surgery Ile- Ife Nigeria
Author 3
Adewale Aderounmu waderounmu@gmail.com Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospitals Complex Surgery Ile- Ife Nigeria
Author 4
Author 5
Author 6
Author 7
Author 8
Author 9
Author 10
Author 11
Author 12
Presenting Author Name
Ademola Agbaje
Presenting Author Email
agbaje1@gmail.com
Presenting Author Country
Nigeria
Abstract
Abstract type
Oral or Poster
Introduction *
Wrong-site surgery (WSS) is the most frequent sentinel event, with an incidence of 0.09 - 4.5 per 10,000 surgeries. Adherence to recommendations for surgical site marking to prevent WSS remains poor, with paucity of data on WSS due to underreporting.
Material & Method *
The first institutional audit of preoperative site marking in Nigeria was prospectively conducted in the 11 surgical and obstetrics and gynecology units of the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospitals Complex (OAUTHC), Ile-Ife, Nigeria, between March-April 2024. Data obtained was analysed using the SPSS version 25. Associations between surgical characteristics and operative site marking were ascertained using chi square, with the level of significance set at a P value of <0.05.
Results *
Surgical site marking was done for only 36.4 % of surgeries involving laterality. Surgical site was marked in 90.2 % of cases by junior resident doctors (RDs) and nurses, and paper tape was used for marking in 92.2 % of cases. There were significant associations between surgical site marking and surgical specialty (P<0.001) as well as urgency of surgery (P=0.001), with ophthalmology (94.0 %) and general (17.6 %) surgeries, elective surgeries (41.8 %), consultant/attending-led surgeries (41.1 %), and major surgeries (43.8 %) involving laterality being significantly more likely to be marked compared to emergency (0.0 %), RD-led (29.3 %) and minor (30.3 %) surgeries.
Conclusion *
The practice of surgical site marking in OAUTHC is low. There is need for institutional protocols on surgical site marking and the education of all surgical staff, to engender a change of practice for patient safety.
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Category
Select Main Category
1 General Topics organized by ISS/SIC
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1.09 Surgery in Low resource Countries
Submission Status
Withdrawn
Word counter
250
Abstract Prizes
Eligible for the BSI Free Paper Prize
No
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript conforming to the format of orignial articles in the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
Eligible for the Grassi Prize
No
- Author must be age 40 or younger
- One of the authors must be a member of ISDS
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript to the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
Eligible for the Kitajima Prize
No
- Author must be age 40 or younger
- One of the authors must be a member of ISDS
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript to the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
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