Posted on Thu, Jan. 16, 2003


Stressed surgeons leave tools in patients


Associated Press

Surgical teams accidentally leave clamps, sponges and other tools inside about 1,500 patients nationwide each year, according to the biggest study of the problem yet.

The mistakes largely result not from fatigue, but from the stress arising from emergencies or complications discovered on the operating table, the researchers reported.

It also happens more often to overweight patients, simply because there is more room inside them to lose equipment, according to the study.

The researchers and several other experts agreed that the number of such mistakes is small compared with the approximately 28 million operations performed each year in the United States. "But no one in any role would say it's acceptable," said Donald Berwick, president of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement.

The study was done by researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital and the Harvard School of Public Health, both of which are in Boston. It is published in today's New England Journal of Medicine.

The researchers checked insurance records from about 800,000 operations in Massachusetts for 16 years ending in 2001. They counted 61 forgotten pieces of surgical equipment in 54 patients. From that, they calculated a national estimate of 1,500 cases yearly. A total of $3 million was paid in the Massachusetts cases, mostly in settlements.

Two-thirds of the mistakes happened even though the equipment was counted before and after the procedure, in keeping with the standard practice.

Most lost objects were sponges, but also included were metal clamps and electrodes. In two cases, 11-inch retractors -- metal strips used to hold back tissue -- were forgotten inside patients. In another operation, four sponges were left inside someone.

The lost objects were usually lodged around the abdomen or hips but sometimes in the chest, vagina or other cavities. They often caused tears, obstructions or infections. One patient died of complications, but the researchers withheld details for reasons of privacy.

Most patients needed additional surgery to remove the object, but sometimes it came out by itself or in a doctor's office. In other cases, patients were not even aware of the object, and it turned up in later surgery for other problems.

The study found that emergency operations are nine times more likely to lead to such mistakes. Operating-room complications requiring a change in procedure make leaving materials behind four times more likely. A one-point increase in a patient's body-mass index, a measure of weight relative to height, raises the chances of such a mistake by 10 percent.

The length of the operation or the hour of day does not appear to make a difference, suggesting that fatigue does not cause such mistakes.

The Boston research team suggested that more X-ray checks be done soon after those operations in which such errors are most likely. Metal instruments and radiologically tagged sponges show up in such checks.

Eventually, wands similar to supermarket bar-code readers might be developed to detect missing equipment, researchers said.

"Something has to be done about this. It's just a very tough balance to decide. Do we really want to add this hoop for every patient to jump through?" said Kaveh Shojania, author of a 2001 federal study on medical mistakes.