Fighting fire with fire safety
Article Outline
The Great Chicago Fire was one of the largest disasters to occur in the United States during the nineteenth century. The conflagration burned for three days, from Oct 8 to 10, 1871, killing hundreds of people and destroying most of downtown Chicago. According to historic reports, the fire cleared a path of destruction about four miles long, averaging three-quarters of a mile wide and encompassing more than 2,000 acres. This area included approximately $222 million in property—a third of the city's valuation. The then-new Chicago water tower survived the fire and remains today as an unofficial memorial to the fire's destructive power, since it was one of only five public buildings spared by the flames.1
Many stories have been told about how the fire may have been started. Some claim that boys were smoking in the haystacks, another report blames a craps game, others report a meteor shower in the area, and the most publicized story involved a cow kicking over a lantern in the O'Leary barn.1 In commemoration of the Great Chicago Fire, October is designated National Fire Safety Month.
OR Fires
Operating room fires occur about 100 times per year, and about 20% of those fires cause harm.2(p251) The basic elements that can cause a fire are always present in the OR, and fire safety can be as easy as communicating about efforts to minimize all aspects of the fire triangle (ie, ignition source, fuel source, and oxidizer). This seems like common sense, but surgical fires still occur.
In a recent report published in The Washington Post, a woman discussed the severe burns sustained by her 73-year-old mother when a fire occurred during surgery to insert a breathing tube into her mother's trachea.3 Reactive chemicals exposed to oxygen were deemed to be the cause of the incident. The daughter has become the spokesperson for a group called SurgicalFire.org4 to educate others about the risk of surgical fires.3
The article also mentions several other surgical fires, including one that caused the death of a woman who was undergoing minor eyelid surgery, the case of a newborn who suffered second- and third-degree burns during a procedure, and the very recent case of a man whose beard caught fire from the alcohol-based skin prep solution that was used to prep him for throat surgery. The article calls attention to the continuing need to educate perioperative personnel about fire risks and the need for mandatory reporting of fires because currently no uniform reporting system exists.3
AORN Efforts
AORN is addressing fire safety in many ways. The “AORN guidance statement: Fire prevention in the operating room,”2 originally published in May 2005, provides a written resource for clinicians and others to readily access information. In July 2006, AORN and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) held a joint webinar to expand knowledge of National Patient Safety Goal (NPSG) 11 (ie, reduce surgical fires)5 and to provide implementation strategies to meet JCAHO survey criteria. This webinar was a cooperative effort between a safety manager, Jen Carlson, BS, from Advocate Christ Medical Center and Hope Children's Hospital, Oak Lawn, Ill, and me, a perioperative clinical nurse specialist. During the webinar, we discussed the NPSG, root causes of OR fires, successful risk-reduction strategies, recommendations provided by Sentinel Event Alert 29,6 and best practices for supporting ongoing safety initiatives.
Despite these successful ventures, AORN still believes that tools are needed to
Thus, the Perioperative Fire Safety Tool Kit was conceived.
The Tool Kit
The Perioperative Fire Safety Tool Kit has been the work of a multidisciplinary Headquarters team. When I asked each of them to tell me what they thought was the best way to describe the tool kit, several themes emerged: unique, collaborative, emotional, and community-minded. The cooperation we have had from our partners outside of AORN has been tremendous. These partners include experts from ECRI, the American Society for Healthcare Risk Management, the American Society for Healthcare Engineering, and Phillips and Associates, as well as the Hartford, Conn, deputy chief fire officer and family members of patients who have experienced a fire in the perioperative area. We could not have created this resource without their willingness to put together such a quality product for improving safety. The Perioperative Fire Safety Tool Kit includes the following components to help organizations develop a proactive fire safety plan:
What You Can Do
With national and local media campaigns focusing on fire safety and prevention in the month of October, it was a natural fit to launch the Perioperative Fire Safety Tool Kit this month. It is my hope that when you review your tool kit from AORN you will contact your local fire department or facility's safety and security division and perhaps launch your own effort to show your patients what you are doing to keep them safe during their surgical experience. If we are going to be successful at creating models in our workplaces where perioperative nurses are recognized for their expertise, we must create opportunities to collaborate with others, which allows us to display our leadership potential.
Fire Safety Month provides us with a perfect opportunity to remember that vigilant fire prevention efforts in the OR should occur every day. The time to discuss the possibility of fire and appropriate fire safety measures applicable to your specific practice is at the beginning of a procedure when all team members are present. Don't be complacent and think a surgical fire will never happen; your patients are counting on you to protect them.
Notes
- “Great Chicago Fire,” Wikipedia . http://en.wikipedia.org/Great_Chicago_Fire (accessed 18 Aug 2006)
- “AORN guidance statement: Fire prevention in the operating room,” . In: Standards, Recommended Practices, and Guidelines . Denver: AORN, Inc; 2006;p. 251–259
- . “Frederick Mother's Burning Inspires Daughter's Activism,” . The Washington Post . July 2006;18:B01; Also available at washingtonpost.com http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/17/AR2006071701231_pf.html (accessed 18 Aug 2006)
- http://www.surgicalfire.org Surgicalfire.org, (accessed 18 Aug 2006)
- “National Patient Safety Goals,” Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations . http://www.jointcommission.org/PatientSafety/NationalPatientSafetyGoals (accessed 18 Aug 2006)
- “Preventing surgical fires,” . Sentinel Event Alert . June 24, 2003;29: Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, http://www.jointcommission.org/SentinelEvents/SentinelEventAlert/sea_29.htm (accessed 18 Aug 2006)
PII: S0001-2092(06)63933-1
doi:10.1016/S0001-2092(06)63933-1
© 2006 AORN, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc All rights reserved.

