Surgeons attach RFID tags to ensure that the correct operation is being performed on the right person and on the correct place of the body. Although such mistakes are rare, they do happen. Government studies estimate that 5-8 wrong site surgeries occur each month. The RFID tag gets encoded by medical staff with the patient’s name, medical record number and information about the type and site of the procedure and other relevant surgical instructions. The tags are placed on the patient’s skin near the surgical site. Before surgery begins, the tags are read by operating room staff with handheld readers to confirm the patient and procedure.
Additionally, RFID can track instruments and sponges used during surgical procedures to improve patient safety and decrease complex, time consuming counting procedures that are prone to human error. RFID helps surgical teams reduce the number of items left in patients during operations.
In a 2007 study published in the Journal of Surgical Research, 52% of retained surgical items were radiopaque sponges and 43% were instruments. Another study of RSI’s published in 2008 in the Annals of Surgery, reported 45% were sponges, 34% were instruments and 21% were needles.
TrackStar enables a count of items prior to surgery to ensure that post surgery, the surgical team can be confident that all instruments, sponges and needles were reconciled using RFID automation to increase safety and wellbeing of the patient while also increasing efficiency of the operating room logistics and workflow processes.