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Crowder_MA Efficiency in ERCP
Crowder_MA Efficiency in ERCP
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Pdf Summary
The presentation, <strong>“Optimizing Efficiency in ERCP,”</strong> by Mary Ann Crowder of WVU Medicine, focuses on how improving workflow can increase safety, productivity, and patient-centered care in ERCP procedures. It defines efficiency as achieving maximum results with minimal waste of time, effort, and resources, and emphasizes that efficiency depends on effective workflow processes. The talk explains why efficiency matters in ERCP: procedure volume is rising, patients are often complex, resource use is high, and delays can increase anesthesia and fluoroscopy time, radiation exposure, complications, and repeat procedures. Major barriers to efficiency are identified across three phases: - <strong>Pre-procedure:</strong> scheduling errors, incomplete patient education, missing instructions, space limitations, late starts, consent issues, and pre-op workup problems - <strong>Intra-procedure:</strong> staff knowledge gaps, supply or equipment issues, difficult cannulation, and positioning challenges - <strong>Post-procedure:</strong> recovery delays and turnover issues The presentation recommends strong <strong>pre-procedure planning</strong>, including case review, anticoagulation and lab checks, supply confirmation, and use of checklists. It also highlights the importance of confirming imaging, diagnosis, consent, and special equipment needs before the procedure. Staff preparedness is another key theme: education, physician training, communication about new products or backorders, and use of guides or reps help support readiness. The talk also stresses testing the ERCP scope, verifying room readiness, and ensuring the correct medications, tools, and backup devices are available. Post-procedure efficiency depends on timely room turnover, discharge, and parallel processing, supported by constant communication. Key takeaways: <strong>efficiency improves outcomes and safety</strong>, depends on <strong>workflow quality</strong>, and requires <strong>communication, data tracking, technology, and diligence</strong>. The presentation concludes that while ERCP can never be fully predictable, strong processes help teams manage unpredictability effectively while prioritizing patient and staff safety.
Keywords
ERCP efficiency
workflow optimization
patient safety
procedure planning
pre-procedure checklist
staff preparedness
room turnover
anesthesia time
radiation exposure
patient-centered care
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