Surgical instrument oversupply drives cost, confusion, and workload in the operating room. With an estimated 78%-87% of instruments being unused, many health systems have recognized the need for supply refinement. By manually recording instrument use and tasking surgeons to review instrument trays, previous quality improvement initiatives have achieved an average 52% reduction in supply. While demonstrating the degree of instrument oversupply, previous methods for identifying required instruments are qualitative, expensive [...]
Author(s): Hill, Ian, Olivere, Lindsey, Helmkamp, Joshua, Le, Elliot, Hill, Westin, Wahlstedt, John, Khoury, Phillip, Gloria, Jared, Richard, Marc J, Rosenberger, Laura H, Codd, Patrick J
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooac003