Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto: Operating Room Black Box Could Provide Valuable Feedback For Surgeons

Anne-Marie Vettorel, The Canadian Press, 30 Aug, 2014 12:44 PM
    TORONTO - A Toronto surgeon who is working to adapt black box aviation technology to track surgeries and improve patient outcomes says preliminary results are promising.
     
    In Dr. Teodor Grantcharov's operating room,"the whole room is wired." Cameras and microphones capture movement and conversation, and patient data, like heart rate and blood pressure, is logged automatically by a data recorder similar to black boxes used on airplanes to record flight data.
     
    The surgery box, which is actually blue, is poised to change medical culture and practice, said Grantcharov, a minimally-invasive surgeon at St. Michael's Hospital and professor at the University of Toronto.
     
    Once surgeons finish their medical training and begin practising independently, "nobody watches us, nobody coaches us, and nobody provides feedback," he said.
     
    This lack of feedback, as well as the pressure for surgeons to appear as though they never make errors, is not serving the medical community, Grantcharov said.
     
    "Changing the culture starts with admitting or being transparent about our deficiencies."
     
    Inspired by the airline industry's willingness to acknowledge human error and reconstruct accidents in order to learn from them, he began developing the technology a couple of years ago, and has been in consultation with Air Canada for the past six months. A test program has been in effect at St. Michael's since April, and he said patients are excited and willing to participate.
     
    Grantcharov said the data collected this spring and summer has yet to be analyzed, but preliminary results are showing that minor inconveniences in the operating room can end up making enormous differences.
     
    "This is the beauty of this project," he said. "We can see things like getting prepared for the surgery, getting the right instruments, how these things can improve our flow and processes."
     
    Or, alternatively, how poor preparation can negatively impact team dynamics, which then has an impact on technical performance and "becomes a vicious circle."
     
    Grantcharov and his team have also been in contact with Google, and are in talks to use the company's Glass computerized eyewear to connect with the black box so it can offer feedback to doctors, helping them course correct in real time.
     
    These kinds of partnerships are critical to moving medicine forward, said Joshua Liu, a physician-turned-entrepreneur and founder of medical startup SeamlessMD.
     
    "There's an increasing role for data analysts and programmers and technologists to help the hospital navigate the newest kind of technologies out there and make that useful inside the hospital, which is a very complex system," said Liu.
     
    "What's definitely become clear is that you do need inter-professional teams working on these problems because they are complicated," he said, saying that the hospital of the future will be the home of healthcare providers but also of IT people, software people and designers.
     
    Grantcharov said that if surgeons do begin using Google Glass, patient data would never make it to the Cloud or even onto a hospital's internal server. It would be kept strictly within the black box system for privacy reasons.
     
    The data would also be kept from patients who file malpractice lawsuits against surgeons.
     
    In some jurisdictions, Grantcharov said, there are legal protections on data used to improve performance and similar protections would need to be adopted in Canada for the new black boxes for surgeries.
     
    "If this is going to be accepted (by surgeons) and implemented... it has to be used as a tool for quality improvement and this data needs to be protected."
     
    Grantcharov's black box is being used in similar pilot studies in Denmark and the northeastern United States and the next step, he said, is promoting its use internationally.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Freight train derails in southern Saskatchewan; CPR says plow winds were cause

    Freight train derails in southern Saskatchewan; CPR says plow winds were cause
    Canadian Pacific Railway says strong plow winds caused the derailment of a train in southern Saskatchewan on Thursday night.

    Freight train derails in southern Saskatchewan; CPR says plow winds were cause

    Canadian relief supplies going to Iraq, RCAF flies in donated weaponry

    Canadian relief supplies going to Iraq, RCAF flies in donated weaponry
    Canada is sending relief supplies to Iraq from a newly established warehouse in Dubai.

    Canadian relief supplies going to Iraq, RCAF flies in donated weaponry

    Scientists at Canada's National Lab created, tested the anti-Ebola drug ZMapp

    Scientists at Canada's National Lab created, tested the anti-Ebola drug ZMapp
    The experimental Ebola drug ZMapp was able to save monkeys even when treatment was started five days after the animals were infected, when some were suffering from advanced disease, a new study shows.

    Scientists at Canada's National Lab created, tested the anti-Ebola drug ZMapp

    Privacy commissioner rules Medicentres failed to protect info on stolen laptop

    Privacy commissioner rules Medicentres failed to protect info on stolen laptop
    Alberta's privacy commissioner says a chain of medical clinics failed to protect patients' health information on a laptop that was stolen — and took too long to publicly report the theft.

    Privacy commissioner rules Medicentres failed to protect info on stolen laptop

    Royal Canadian Mint unveils new limited-edition Superman coin collection

    Royal Canadian Mint unveils new limited-edition Superman coin collection
    The Royal Canadian Mint on Friday unveiled four limited-edition Superman coins, reproducing colourful iconic images from DC Comics' book covers.

    Royal Canadian Mint unveils new limited-edition Superman coin collection

    Quebec agrees to proceed with energy strategy at annual premiers meeting

    Quebec agrees to proceed with energy strategy at annual premiers meeting
    Quebec's rookie premier, Philippe Couillard, made his presence felt at his first meeting with Canada's other premiers, agreeing Friday to have his province join in the development of a national energy strategy that had been stalled by a previous separatist government.

    Quebec agrees to proceed with energy strategy at annual premiers meeting