SIOUX CITY, IA – In an effort to improve surgical safety for patients, Mercy Hospital now requires all surgical sites to be marked with a #10 stainless steel scalpel blade instead of the traditional skin marking pen. Hospital administrators believe this will finally provide the safety precautions necessary to ensure the correct body part is always operated on.
The new regulations require physicians to carve a mark into the patients skin less than 1 hour prior to surgery. If more than 1 hour has passed since the initial carving, a second carving must be done due to concern that some patients may be “super healers,” a term made up by JACHO to describe patients with the magical ability to heal deep lacerations within a matter of hours.
Physicians are also no longer allowed to use their initials when making the surgical site carving. The mark must consist of the surgeon’s full legal name (middle name may be abbreviated). If the name is illegible, OR nursing staff have been instructed to ask for a re-carving to be done.
“We really needed something a little more… permanent,” states Lincoln Reynolds, Mercy Hospital administrator and staunch proponent of the new guidelines. “The thought of patients sneaking into a bathroom and spending 20 minutes vigorously scrubbing off an ink mark, ultimately leading to the surgeon operating on a the wrong body part, makes me feel sick. That’s the kind of hypothetical situation we’re trying to prevent.
Thus far, the only major change noticed by the OR staff has been a recent increase in pre-op blood transfusions.