九色视频 customers

Committed to听your success

From teaching institutions to community hospitals, to government VAs and surgery centers, more organizations are choosing the SurgiCount System. There are more than 500听facilities using the SurgiCount System, including 60% of U.S. News & World Report鈥檚 top 10 Honor Roll Hospitals.15

Straight from the source

It鈥檚 true. We have 100% belief in our SurgiCount System and here鈥檚 the story direct from our customers.

鈥淚t was clinicians training clinicians, which created a strong comfort level.鈥
Jacalyn Kay, IT Supervisor, Perioperative Applications, University Hospitals Case Medical Center

鈥淭he Safety-Sponge System has given OR nurses at UCSF a tool they and surgeons can count on for an accurate count. Using this system for the past two years has provided relief for the entire surgical team and eliminated this preventable and devastating event.鈥
Jeffrey Pearl, MD, Professor of Clinical Surgery, Vice-Chair, Department of Surgery, Fishbon Chair of Ambulatory Surgery, Associate Dean, Associate Chief Medical Officer, UCSF at Mount Zion

鈥淲hat makes a missed count even trickier for a hospital is that it鈥檚 a non-defendable error, or a 鈥榥ever event.鈥 That鈥檚 why we put these standard practices in place鈥ecause then you can say, 鈥榃e never, ever vary from this practice.鈥 We haven鈥檛 seen a single surgically retained item since implementation.鈥
Valerie Marsh, RN, MSN, University of Michigan Health System

鈥淚t鈥檚 better patient care. We鈥檝e never regretted it, and we would never go back.鈥
Don Owens, Divisional Director of Surgical Services, Medical Center Hospital, Odessa, TX

鈥淎fter 18 months, the datamatrix-coded sponge (DMS) system eliminated sponge RSIs from a high volume surgical practice. The DMS system caused no work-flow disruptions or increases in case duration. Staff satisfaction was acceptable, with a high degree of trust in the system.鈥
Robert Cima, MD, MA Associate Professor and Vice-Chairman, Surgical Services, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine

鈥淪urgical teams have been seeking a solution to this problem for decades. 九色视频 randomized trial of the Safety-Sponge System suggests that one is now at hand. 九色视频 study found it was readily adopted, was cost effective, and markedly improved detection of sponges that had been misplaced or miscounted in the operating room.鈥
Atul Gawande, MD, MPH Associate Professor of Surgery, Harvard Medical School

鈥淥nce we saw the technology demonstrated, we felt from an operational standpoint that the RF process wasn鈥檛 nearly as elegant and easy to implement as SurgiCount; the notion of prevention rather than reaction went over well with the operating room directors鈥t the end of the day, though, it was really about this being just the right thing to do for patients; you can鈥檛 put a price on patient safety.鈥
Mark French, Chief Operations Officer, Ochsner Health System

鈥淲e have had remarkable success with SurgiCount.鈥
Joseph E. Bisordi, MD, FACP Executive VP and Chief Medical Officer, Ochsner Health System

鈥淲e are on a road to providing excellent, reproducible and sustainable quality of care to every person, every time, every touch 鈥 the investment in the SurgiCount system is an example of such efforts.鈥
Jeremy Blanchard, MD, VP of Quality and Medical Affairs, PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center

"We did the education with the Stryker team and the implementation was done with very few issues. Personally, I was amazed at the ease of the transition. The daily reports that are obtainable and produced are wonderful and allow for next day correction with individual staff members."
Diane Gries, O.R. Director, Tech USC

鈥淎fter thorough diligence on available retained sponge prevention solutions, we concluded the SurgiCount Safety Sponge System is the safest, easiest and most complete retained sponge solution available.鈥
Andrew Montgomery, VP of Supply Chain Management, LHP Hospital Group

鈥淭his guarantees we don鈥檛 leave anything behind. We鈥檒l always do manual counts, but this gives us that additional support and keeps the receipt of what we鈥檇 done. It鈥檚 protection for the patients and the doctors.鈥
Dr. Steven Cabrales, Chief Medical Officer, PeaceHealth St. John Medical Center

鈥淏y using this system, we intend to eliminate the chance of this happening to even one of our patients. The bar code system pays for itself many times over if we prevent just one retained sponge mishap.鈥
Patrick Branco, CEO, Ketchikan Medical Center

We've got your back

鈥淲e had a big case with about 80 lap sponges. I had relieved towards the end of the case and upon my first final sponge count, all the bag pouches looked full. But the SurgiCounter said I was missing one. I thought to myself, 鈥業鈥檓 not missing anything,鈥 but I carefully recounted every pouch. Lo and behold, in the middle of the sponge bags was one empty pouch 鈥 and the counter had picked it up. This was a positive experience that could have had a much worse outcome. So, it is worth using and highly recommended as a good safety measure.鈥

Kathy Collins, RN, O.R. Travel Nurse

2019


Watch to learn more about preventing this never event.

2018


Surgical sponges left inside woman for at least six years.

2017


An automatic surgical sponge counting system fits seamlessly with operating room (OR) protocols, helping to verify manual counts.

鈥淪ponges being left behind is the number one contributor to the number one surgical never event, which is retained surgical items,鈥 says Jason Davies, senior brand manager with Stryker Surgical Safety.

Medical products maker Stryker Corp. has for years produced some very high-tech devices that surgeons use to be more successful in operating rooms.

A new surgical safety system is being used to improve patient care in more than 550 hospitals nationwide.

Stryker Corp. announced that more than 550 hospitals nationwide are using the SurgiCount Safety-Sponge System and have accounted for nearly 200 million surgical sponges around the United States in the past five years.

The modern hospital operating room is no place for technophobes or Luddites. Just as no doctor or nurse today would countenance the use of 鈥渕edicinal鈥 leeches to draw out the 鈥渂ad blood鈥 that physicians in medieval times thought caused many of their patients鈥 ailments, there is simply no good reason to rely solely on whiteboards to track the use of surgical sponges in the operating room.

A healthy patient who was expected to make a full recovery from a routine surgical procedure is found dead in bed from an unintentional opioid overdose.

Kalamazoo, Mich.-based Stryker released its SurgiCount Tablet, a touch-screen interface for its SurgiCount Safety-Sponge System. Here鈥檚 what you should know.

Accounting for Surgical Sponges Should Not & Need Not Be鈥

Retained surgical sponges continue to be a frequently reported sentinel event in operating rooms across the U.S.


Retained surgical sponges occur in roughly a dozen patients a day in the U.S.17


Site References

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Stryker Corporation or its divisions or other corporate affiliated entities own, use or have applied for the following trademarks or service marks: SAFE-T Lap, Safety-Sponge, Stryker, SurgiCount, SurgiCount360, and SurgiCounter. All other trademarks are trademarks of their respective owners or holders.