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CONTINUING EDUCATION Clinical Issues 1.2 www.aornjournal.org/content/cme SHARON A. VAN WICKLIN, MSN, RN, CNOR, CRNFA(E), CPSN-R, PLNC; KERRIE CHAMBERS, MSN, RN, CNOR, CNS-CP; SUSAN KLACIK, BS, CRCST, ACE, CHL, FCS Continuing Education Contact Hours indicates that continuing education (CE) contact hours are available for this activity. Earn the CE contact hours by reading this article, reviewing the purpose/goal and objectives, and completing the online Learner Evaluation at http:// www.aornjournal.org/content/cme. Each applicant who successfully completes this program can immediately print a certificate of completion. Accreditation AORN is accredited as a provider of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation. Approvals This program meets criteria for CNOR and CRNFA recertification, as well as other CE requirements. Event: #16506 Session: #0001 Fee: For current pricing, please go to: http://www.aornjournal .org/content/cme. AORN is provider-approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider Number CEP 13019. Check with your state board of nursing for acceptance of this activity for relicensure. The CE contact hours for this article expire February 28, 2019. Pricing is subject to change. Conflict-of-Interest Disclosures Purpose/Goal To provide the learner with knowledge of AORN’s guidelines related to using an automated washer or washer/disinfector that includes a lubrication cycle to process implants, using items packaged in impervious packages if dropped, using a normal saline solution rather than sterile water to wipe instruments and flush lumens during surgical procedures, wicking versus blotting excess skin antiseptics in a gel form, and using silver-impregnated dressings in the OR. Sharon A. Van Wicklin, MSN, RN, CNOR, CRNFA(E), CPSN-R, PLNC; Kerrie Chambers, MSN, RN, CNOR, CNS-CP; and Susan Klacik, BS, CRCST, ACE, CHL, FCS, have no declared affiliations that could be perceived as posing potential conflicts of interest in the publication of this article. The behavioral objectives for this program were created by Helen Starbuck Pashley, MA, BSN, CNOR, clinical editor, with consultation from Susan Bakewell, MS, RN-BC, director, Perioperative Education. Ms Starbuck Pashley and Ms Bakewell have no declared affiliations that could be perceived as posing potential conflicts of interest in the publication of this article. Sponsorship or Commercial Support Objectives 1. Discuss practices that could jeopardize safety in the perioperative area. 2. Discuss common areas of concern that relate to perioperative best practices. 3. Describe implementation of evidence-based practice in relation to perioperative nursing care. No sponsorship or commercial support was received for this article. Disclaimer AORN recognizes these activities as CE for RNs. This recognition does not imply that AORN or the American Nurses Credentialing Center approves or endorses products mentioned in the activity. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aorn.2015.12.011 ª AORN, Inc, 2016 www.aornjournal.org AORN Journal j 241 CLINICAL ISSUES 1.2 www.aornjournal.org/content/cme THIS MONTH Using an automated washer or washer/disinfector that includes a lubrication cycle to process implants Key words: surgical implants, lubrication, critical water. Using items packaged in impervious packages if dropped Key words: impervious package, dropped items, event-related sterility. Using a normal saline solution rather than sterile water to wipe instruments and flush lumens during surgical procedures Key words: normal saline solution, sterile water, lumens, gross soil. Wicking versus blotting excess skin antiseptics in a gel form Key words: wicking, blotting, skin antiseptics. Silver-based dressings and risk of patient injury if left in place during a surgical procedure Key words: silver-based dressings, surgical procedures, patient injuries. Using an automated washer or washer/disinfector that includes a lubrication cycle to process implants QUESTION: Should implants, such as plates and screws, be processed in an automated washer or washer/disinfector that includes a lubrication cycle? 242 j AORN Journal ANSWER: Unless specifically directed to do so by the implant manufacturer’s instructions for use (IFU), implants should not be processed through the lubrication cycle of an www.aornjournal.org February 2016, Vol. 103, No. 2 Some implant manufacturers address the need for using critical water during the implant’s final rinse. Critical water is extensively treated to help ensure that microorganisms and organic and inorganic material are removed; a filtration system may be part of the treatment process.2 Using critical water as the final rinse helps prevent water contaminants (eg, microorganisms, minerals) that may be present in tap water from being deposited on the implants.2 Pyrogenic reactions may occur in patients if contaminants remain on the implant after processing.2 The importance of following the manufacturer’s IFU relative to lubrication and using the correct type of rinse water parallels the AORN “Guideline for cleaning and care of surgical instruments.”3 To prevent toxic anterior segment syndrome (TASS), a complication of anterior segment eye surgery most commonly associated with cataract surgery, instruments should be thoroughly cleaned and rinsed in accordance with the manufacturer’s IFU and professional guidelines. Most instances of TASS have been associated with www.aornjournal.org Just as insufficient rinsing and residues that remain on eye instruments after cleaning can lead to toxic reactions such as TASS, there is a potential for toxic reactions in patients as a result of lubricant residues remaining on items implanted in patients. Most automated washers and washer/disinfectors can be programmed for customized cycles that exclude the lubrication cycle. The sterile processing team member responsible for processing surgical implants should consult the manufacturer or the manufacturer’s IFU to determine whether and how the rinse cycle can be programmed to run without the lubrication cycle and still meet the cycle parameters required for complete cleaning action. Susan Klacik, BS, CRCST, ACE, CHL, FCS, is an International Association of Health Care and Materiel Management representative for the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI); president of Klacik Consulting, Canfield, OH; and Central Sterile Services manager at St Elizabeth Youngstown Hospital, OH. print & web 4C/FPO Instrument lubricants used in washers/disinfectors are steam permeable and may be recommended by instrument manufacturers; however, some lubricants may be incompatible with the implant material and adversely affect the implant.1 Cytotoxicity may ensue if the implant is placed into sterile tissue, resulting in prolonged contact with lubricant residue; neural and ocular tissues can be particularly susceptible to cytotoxic reactions.1 Incorrectly diluting the lubricant by having too much lubricant in the solution also can cause a buildup of lubricant residue on the implant, increasing the potential for a cytotoxic reaction.1 Implant manufacturers may not recommend the use of lubricants on implants because there are no validated data to support the use of lubrication on implanted devices. contaminated instruments, contaminated ultrasonic cleaners, detergent residues (eg, soaps, enzymatic cleaners) remaining on instruments, insufficient rinsing of instruments, or endotoxin residues on instruments.3 Sharon A. Van Wicklin, MSN, RN, CNOR, CRNFA(E), CPSN-R, PLNC, is a senior perioperative practice specialist in the Nursing Department at AORN, Inc, Denver, CO. AORN Journal j 243 print & web 4C/FPO automated washer or washer/disinfector. Implants should be free of contaminants and residues that could result in adverse effects to the patient. The lubrication cycle often is performed automatically as one of the final steps in an automated washer or washer/disinfector cleaning process. The processing of implants using the regular instrument cycle with the instrument lubrication preceding the dry cycle may result in the instrument lubricant remaining on the implant. Certain lubricants that are manually applied may create a film that is resistant to steam or ethylene oxide penetration; thus, although subjected to a sterilization process, there may be lubricant remaining on the implant when it is implanted into the patient.1 Clinical Issues Van Wicklin et al References 1. The optimal selection and use of surgical instrument lubricants. Healthcare Purchasing News. 2008;May:34-37. 2. Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation. Technical information report 34: water for the reprocessing of February 2016, Vol. 103, No. 2 medical devices. AAMI; 2014. http://my.aami.org/store/SiteContent/ previewfiles/TIR34_1409_preview.pdf. Accessed October 16, 2015. 3. Guideline for cleaning and care of surgical instruments. In: Guidelines for Perioperative Practice. Denver, CO: AORN, Inc; 2016:773-808. Using items packaged in impervious packages if dropped QUESTION: While opening a sterile item packaged by the manufacturer in an impervious double-pouch configuration, I dropped the inner package onto the floor without contaminating the sterile field. After opening the dropped inner package onto the sterile field, a colleague said that because the package had touched the floor, it was contaminated and should not be used. If true, is there any difference between an item packaged by facility personnel and the manufacturer? What about double-wrapped items? ANSWER: No research evidence specifically addresses whether packaged items dropped on the floor may be safely opened onto the sterile field. Because wrapped items are not impervious, they should not be used if dropped on the floor. Relative to dropped items in impervious packages, Berry and Kohn’s Operating Room Technique,1 a well-known, foundational perioperative text, provides the following opinion: A dropped package is considered contaminated on the outside. If the wrapper is impervious and the area of contact is dry and intact, the item may be transferred to the sterile field. Packages that have been dropped on the floor should not be put back into sterile storage.1(p261) Although the 14th edition of Alexander’s Care of the Patient in Surgery, another well-known, foundational perioperative text, formerly provided a similar opinion,2 this is no longer the case. The 15th edition of Alexander’s Care of the Patient in Surgery does not provide an opinion specific to dropped items in impervious packages.3 When making a practice decision regarding the safety of opening dropped items in impervious packages onto the sterile field, it may be prudent to contact the manufacturer of the item. The sterility of the item in the package has been validated by the manufacturer using a double pouch, and because of this, the manufacturer may not consider the item to be sterile if the inner pouch has been contaminated. Relative to facilityprocessed items in double pouches, contacting the pouch manufacturer may provide a different answer because the 244 j AORN Journal pouch manufacturer may consider the pouch to be impervious and validated to provide an item that is sterile when opened. Sterility is event related and depends on whether the integrity of the package has been correctly maintained.4,5 The sterility of an item does not change with the passage of time4 but may be affected by particular events,5 such as being dropped on the floor. According to the AORN “Guideline for environmental cleaning,”6 floors in the perioperative practice setting and items that contact the floor for any amount of time should be considered contaminated at all times. Munoz-Price et al7 found that the OR floor was a potential reservoir for microorganisms, and when patient care items (eg, IV tubing, safety straps) inadvertently touched the floor, the items were potentially contaminated and could transmit pathogens to the patient if they were not disinfected before contact with the patient. If there is any doubt about the sterility of the item, it should be considered contaminated and should not be used.1-4 Additionally, when making practice decisions where there is no conclusive evidence to support or negate a specific practice, perioperative RNs should determine actions based on careful consideration of the benefits and potential harms. In this case, the benefits are reduced time and money compared with the risk of patient infection. Sharon A. Van Wicklin, MSN, RN, CNOR, CRNFA(E), CPSN-R, PLNC, is a senior perioperative practice specialist in the Nursing Department at AORN, Inc, Denver, CO. References 1. Phillips NM. Principles of asepsis and sterile technique. In: Berry and Kohn’s Operating Room Technique. 12th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby Elsevier; 2013:252-266. 2. Nicolette LH. Infection prevention and control in the perioperative setting. In: Rothrock JC, ed. Alexander’s Care of the Patient in Surgery. 14th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby Elsevier; 2011: 48-110. www.aornjournal.org February 2016, Vol. 103, No. 2 3. Spry C. Infection prevention and control. In: Rothrock JC, ed. Alexander’s Care of the Patient in Surgery. 15th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby Elsevier; 2015:69-123. 4. Guideline for sterile technique. In: Guidelines for Perioperative Practice. Denver, CO: AORN, Inc; 2016:65-94. 5. Guideline for sterilization. In: Guidelines for Perioperative Practice. Denver, CO: AORN, Inc; 2016:823-850. Clinical Issues 6. Guideline for environmental cleaning. In: Guidelines for Perioperative Practice. Denver, CO: AORN, Inc; 2016: 7-28. 7. Munoz-Price LS, Birnbach DJ, Lubarsky DA, et al. Decreasing operating room environmental pathogen contamination through improved cleaning practice. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2012; 33(9):897-904. Using a normal saline solution rather than sterile water to wipe instruments and flush lumens during surgical procedures QUESTION: One of the surgeons I work with has requested that we not keep sterile water on the field for the purpose of wiping instruments and flushing lumens during the surgical procedure. The surgeon suggested that we use normal saline solution rather than water to eliminate the potential for using water rather than saline for irrigation. Is this acceptable? ANSWER: According to the AORN “Guideline for cleaning and care of surgical instruments,” during the procedure, the scrub person should remove gross soil from instruments by wiping the surfaces with a sterile surgical sponge moistened with sterile water. Saline should not be used p777) to wipe instrument surfaces.1( Likewise, the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI) states in its Comprehensive Guide to Steam Sterilization and Sterility Assurance in Health Care Facilities that instruments should be maintained as free of gross soil as possible during the surgical or other health care procedure. A disposable sponge moistened with water (not saline) should be used to wipe gross soil from instruments . . . Water, and not saline, should be used, as saline will corrode the instrumentation.2(p48,59) Blood, organic material, debris, and saline are highly corrosive to instrument surfaces and can cause corrosion, rusting, and pitting when allowed to dry on surgical instruments.1,2 Saline contains chlorides; if allowed to remain on the instruments during the procedure, there is an increased potential for rust or corrosion.2 Human blood also contains minerals such as sodium, chloride, potassium, calcium, and magnesium. When allowed to dry, these materials can be difficult to remove from instrument surfaces and lumens during the cleaning and decontamination process, potentially reducing www.aornjournal.org the efficacy of the subsequent sterilization.3-5 For this reason, it is necessary for the scrub person to keep the instruments free of blood and soil during the procedure by irrigating the lumens and wiping instruments with a moist sponge. Both AORN and AAMI agree that best practice is to use sterile water for removing blood and gross soil from instruments during a surgical procedure; however, whenever there is a patient safety concern relative to a particular recommended practice, the potential harms should be weighed against the associated benefits. The potential for sterile water, rather than normal saline, to be inadvertently used as irrigation fluid during the procedure on certain high-risk patients has been raised by the surgeon as a patient safety concern. Notably, medications and solutions on the sterile field should be labeled and the label confirmed by both the perioperative RN and the scrub person.6 The accidental use of sterile water as an irrigation fluid during pediatric or neurosurgical procedures may have serious consequences. There is also a risk of hyponatremia when irrigation is performed with a large amount of sterile water.7 In situations in which there is an increased risk of irrigation with sterile water, the scrub person should wipe the instruments and flush lumens with normal saline solution to help remove soil, understanding that this increases the potential for instrument corrosion. The potential for patient harm that might arise if the sterile water on the field was to be used for irrigation purposes may outweigh the potential risk of instrument corrosion that could arise from using saline rather than water. Leaders of the health care organization, in consultation with a multidisciplinary team, should conduct a risk assessment to further explore the potential benefits and harms surrounding this practice question and to determine the processes that will be followed at the facility. The multidisciplinary team should include representatives from sterile processing, risk management, and infection prevention as well as surgeons, scrub AORN Journal j 245 Van Wicklin et al persons, perioperative RNs, and other involved personnel. When the team has reached a decision, they should develop a policy and procedure for standardized practices throughout the facility. Perioperative educators should provide education and competency verification activities for those who will be affected by the new policy (eg, scrub persons, perioperative RNs, sterile processing personnel). To determine the overall effects of the multidisciplinary team’s decision, perioperative team members should implement follow-up quality assurance activities, such as monitoring the instruments for a specific period of time, to determine if the change in practice has resulted in increased amounts of corrosion on the instruments. Sharon A. Van Wicklin, MSN, RN, CNOR, CRNFA(E), CPSN-R, PLNC, is a senior perioperative practice specialist in the Nursing Department at AORN, Inc, Denver, CO. February 2016, Vol. 103, No. 2 References 1. Guideline for cleaning and care of surgical instruments. In: Guidelines for Perioperative Practice. Denver, CO: AORN, Inc; 2016:773-808. 2. ANSI/AAMI ST79: Comprehensive guide to steam sterilization and sterility assurance in health care facilities. AAMI; 2013. http://my.aami.org/aamiresources/previewfiles/ST79_Wa4_1310_ preview.pdf. Accessed October 16, 2015. 3. AAMI TIR12: 2010 Designing, Testing, and Labeling Reusable Medical Devices for Reprocessing in Health Care Facilities: a Guide for Medical Device Manufacturers. Arlington, VA: AAMI; 2010. 4. Spry CC, Brooks Tighe SM. Care and handling of surgical instruments. In: Brooks Tighe S, ed. Instrumentation for the Operating Room: a Photographic Manual. 8th ed. St Louis, MO: Elsevier/ Mosby; 2012:1-2. 5. Root CW, Kaiser N, Antonucci C. What, how and why: enzymatic instrument cleaning products in healthcare environments. Healthcare Purchasing News. 2008;32(11):50. 6. Guideline for medication safety. In: Guidelines for Perioperative Practice. Denver, CO: AORN, Inc; 2016:289-327. 7. Guideline for minimally invasive surgery. In: Guidelines for Perioperative Practice. Denver, CO: AORN, Inc; 2016:589-616. Wicking versus blotting excess skin antiseptics in a gel form QUESTION: What does AORN recommend about blotting excess skin antiseptic when the antiseptic is in a gel form? Does AORN recommend a specific skin antiseptic? ANSWER: AORN does not recommend the use of one specific skin antiseptic product over another. According to the AORN “Guideline for preoperative patient skin antisepsis,” a multidisciplinary team including perioperative RNs, physicians, and infection preventionists should select safe and effective antiseptic products for preoperative patient skin antisepsis. The collective evidence indicates that there is no one antiseptic that is more effective than another for preventing SSI.1(p47) AORN recommends that perioperative team members follow the manufacturer’s IFU when applying preoperative patient skin antiseptics. When applying these antiseptics, perioperative personnel should prevent the antiseptic solution from pooling or soaking into linens or the patient’s hair by using reusable or disposable sterile towels to absorb drips and excess solution during application, removing materials that are saturated with the skin antiseptic before the patient is draped, and 246 j AORN Journal wicking excess solution with a sterile towel to help dry the surgical prep area completely.1 A wicking action uses absorbent material to draw off excess solution and to leave sufficient antiseptic on the skin to cover the prepared area. A blotting action uses absorbent material to dry the area, and this drying action might partially or fully remove the product from the skin; therefore, a wicking action is preferred to a blotting action. Excess skin antiseptics in gel form take longer to dry and are not easily wicked. For this reason, gel products should be applied in a thin, even layer without leaving large globules of excess product on the patient’s skin. Allowing the antiseptic to dry completely for the full time recommended by the manufacturer before sterile drapes are applied improves the safety and efficacy of preoperative patient skin antisepsis.1 Sharon A. Van Wicklin, MSN, RN, CNOR, CRNFA(E), CPSN-R, PLNC, is a senior perioperative practice specialist in the Nursing Department at AORN, Inc, Denver, CO. Reference 1. Guideline for preoperative patient skin antisepsis. In: Guidelines for Perioperative Practice. Denver, CO: AORN; 2016:41-64. www.aornjournal.org February 2016, Vol. 103, No. 2 Clinical Issues Silver-based dressings and risk of patient injury if left in place during a surgical procedure QUESTION: Do silver-based dressings present a risk of patient injury when left in place during a surgical procedure? ANSWER: Silver-impregnated dressings are often seen on patients with total joint knee or hip incisions, sternal chest incisions, and wounds with large amounts of exudate and may be near the area requiring surgery or an area where positioning devices are needed. The perioperative team should weigh the risks and benefits of leaving a silver-impregnated dressing in place during surgery. Some of the risks associated with silver-impregnated dressings include surgical site infection if removed and replaced, pressure ulcer development if the dressing is between the patient and a positioning device, and potential burns if an electrocautery device is used. Based on the perioperative assessment, the team may decide to implement one of the following actions: removing the dressing, replacing the silver dressing with a nonsilver dressing, leaving the silver dressing in place, or leaving the silver dressing in place and using a bipolar cautery unit. The benefits of leaving the silver dressing in place may be that silver has antimicrobial properties that may reduce the bioburden and associated endotoxins in wounds, according to Abboud et al.1 Other benefits for the patient include avoiding painful removal of the dressing and the expense of replacing the silver dressing postoperatively. Patient assessment should include determining if the silver dressing will interfere with the surgical site (eg, during prepping, draping, or incision). To minimize the risk of infection at the surgical site, the nurse must ensure that the surgical site is clean and that no potential contaminants (eg, silver dressing) are in or near the prepared area of the surgical site. If the dressing is within the prepared area, the nurse should remove the silver-impregnated dressing or replace the dressing with a smaller one that does not interfere with the surgical site. Another key patient assessment the nurse should make is to determine whether the dressing is in direct contact with any patient positioning devices. The direct pressure of a patient positioning device on a silver-impregnated dressing could lead to pressure ulcers. The perioperative nurse may need to remove the dressing and replace it with a nonesilver-impregnated dressing or add a different type of padding (eg, instead of using a Wilson frame alone, using a Wilson frame with gel padding if the dressing interferes with the patient positioning device). www.aornjournal.org Silver dressings may conduct electricity and therefore may be of concern when used near or around the anesthesia monitoring electrodes or the electrosurgical unit’s (ESU’s) dispersive pad or active electrode for monopolar electrosurgery.1,2 The location of a silver-impregnated dressing near these items could provide the potential for an alternate current pathway.3 A review of the literature did not reveal any research studies involving silver dressings and ESUs. It may be prudent for the nurse to remove silver-impregnated dressings that are located between the ESU’s dispersive pad and active electrode to prevent the silver in the dressing from creating an alternate path to ground and potentially causing an electrical burn injury. Additionally, silver-impregnated dressings have caused some concern for patients undergoing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) because of silver’s electrical conductivity, leading to the potential for activating the MRI’s radio frequency (RF) magnetic field and the potential for excessive tissue heating or image distortion.4 Chaudhry et al4 studied silver-impregnated dressings applied to the hind limb of euthanized pigs (with and without pig skin) by using fluoroscopic temperature probes to measure the tissue temperature changes when exposed to six standard MRI sequencing patterns. This study found no significant tissue temperature increase. Nyenhuis and Duan2 used a gelled saline substance solidified with silver-impregnated dressings to mimic a human torso and head. The researchers exposed the surrogate human torso to MRI and measured the temperature inside the surrogate while it was in the MRI equipment. The authors concluded that the silver dressings they evaluated had temperature increases that would be acceptable in human tissue. Nyenhuis and Duan2 also evaluated image distortion caused by silver dressings when exposed to standard MRI sequencing. The authors concluded that the dressing showed little to no image distortion greater than a 3-mm area around the dressing. Chaudhry et al4 tested three silver-based dressings and found that none produced moderate or severe image distortion after being exposed to MRI scanning. A radiologist assessed all images and found that some of the images with silver-impregnated dressings showed minimal differences compared with those without these dressings, but the findings were not clinically significant. In both studies, the researchers concluded that silver dressings could be used in the MRI environment without patient harm and that future studies should be directed toward newer silver-based products because a number of different dressings now are available with different compositions of silver.2,4 AORN Journal j 247 Van Wicklin et al February 2016, Vol. 103, No. 2 Kerrie Chambers, MSN, RN, print & web 4C/FPO CNOR, CNS-CP, is a perioperative nursing specialist in the Nursing Department at AORN, Inc, Denver, CO. 248 j AORN Journal References 1. Abboud EC, Settle JC, Legare TB, Marcet JE, Barillo DJ, Sanchez JE. Silver-based dressings for the reduction of surgical site infection: review of current experience and recommendations for future studies. Burns. 2014;40(Suppl 1):S30-S39. 2. Nyenhuis J, Duan L. An evaluation of MRI safety and compatibility of a silver-impregnated antimicrobial wound dressing. J Am Coll Radiol. 2009;6(7):500-505. 3. Guideline for electrosurgery. In: Guidelines for Perioperative Practice. Denver, CO: AORN, Inc; 2016:119-136. 4. Chaudhry Z, Sammet S, Coffey R, Crockett A, Yuh WT, Miller S. Assessing the safety and compatibility of silver based wound dressings in a magnetic resonance environment. Burns. 2009;35(8):1080-1085. www.aornjournal.org LEARNER EVALUATION Continuing Education: Clinical Issues 1.2 www.aornjournal.org/content/cme T his evaluation is used to determine the extent to which this continuing education program met your learning needs. The evaluation is printed here for your convenience. To receive continuing education credit, you must complete the online Learner Evaluation at http://www.aornjournal.org/content/cme. Rate the items as described below. 5. To what extent were your individual objectives met? Low 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. High 6. Will you be able to use the information from this article in your work setting? 1. Yes 2. No 7. Will you change your practice as a result of reading this article? (If yes, answer question #7A. If no, answer question #7B.) 7A. How will you change your practice? (Select all that apply) 1. I will provide education to my team regarding why change is needed. 2. I will work with management to change/implement a policy and procedure. 3. I will plan an informational meeting with physicians to seek their input and acceptance of the need for change. 4. I will implement change and evaluate the effect of the change at regular intervals until the change is incorporated as best practice. 5. Other: __________________________________ 7B. If you will not change your practice as a result of reading this article, why? (Select all that apply) 1. The content of the article is not relevant to my practice. 2. I do not have enough time to teach others about the purpose of the needed change. 3. I do not have management support to make a change. 4. Other: __________________________________ 8. Our accrediting body requires that we verify the time you needed to complete the 1.2 continuing education contact hour (72-minute) program: ______________ PURPOSE/GOAL To provide the learner with knowledge of AORN’s guidelines related to using an automated washer or washer/disinfector that includes a lubrication cycle to process implants, using items packaged in impervious packages if dropped, using a normal saline solution rather than sterile water to wipe instruments and flush lumens during surgical procedures, wicking versus blotting excess skin antiseptics in a gel form, and using silver-impregnated dressings in the OR. OBJECTIVES To what extent were the following objectives of this continuing education program achieved? 1. Discuss practices that could jeopardize safety in the perioperative area. Low 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. High 2. Discuss common areas of concern that relate to perioperative best practices. Low 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. High 3. Describe implementation of evidence-based practice in relation to perioperative nursing care. Low 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. High CONTENT 4. To what extent did this article increase your knowledge of the subject matter? Low 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. High www.aornjournal.org AORN Journal j 249