The Universal Protocol provides guidance for health care professionals. It consists of three key steps: conducting a pre-procedure verification process, marking the procedure site, and performing a time-out.
The Universal Protocol is not limited to operating rooms; it is relevant to all settings where operative and invasive procedures are performed. The overall purpose of the Universal Protocol is to improve patient safety and prevent procedural errors.
2020年5月13日 · The Universal Protocol dictates the minimum requirements physicians must follow to help prevent basic surgical mistakes and is required to be implemented by all accredited hospitals, ambulatory care, and office-based surgical facilities.
The Universal Protocol applies to all accredited hospitals, ambulatory care, and office-based surgery facilities. The protocol requires performing a time out prior to beginning surgery, a practice that has been shown to improve teamwork and decrease the overall risk of wrong-site surgery.
This document has been adapted from the full Universal Protocol. For specific requirements of the Universal Protocol, see The Joint Commission standards.
The universal protocol should be applicable or adaptable to all operative and other invasive procedures that expose patients to harm, including procedures done in settings other than the operating room.
In developing this protocol, consensus was reached on the following principles: q Wrong site, wrong procedure, wrong person surgery can and must be prevented. q A robust approach—using multiple, complementary strategies—is necessary to achieve the goal
The Universal Protocol, intended to prevent wrong site, wrong procedure, wrong person sur-gery, is based on the consensus of experts from relevant clinical specialty areas and professional disciplines.2 It is endorsed by more than 49 pro-fessional medical and nursing associations and or-ganizations.3 The Universal Protocol was devel-
Site marking remains a core component of The Joint Commission's Universal Protocol to prevent WSPEs. Root cause analyses of WSPEs consistently reveal communication issues as a prominent underlying factor.
2024年2月19日 · Universal Protocol for Preventing Wrong Site, Wrong Procedure, Wrong Person Surgery UP.01.01.01: Conduct a preprocedure verification process. Applies to: Ambulatory, Critical Access Hospital, Hospital, Office-Based Surgery