Structures perioperative nursing documentation with pre/intra/post-operative assessments and counts. Use when documenting OR nursing care, performing surgical counts, or managing perioperative documentation.
Perioperative nursing encompasses the pre-operative, intra-operative, and post-operative phases of surgical patient care. AORN (Association of periOperative Registered Nurses) Guidelines for Perioperative Practice provide the evidence-based standards. The Joint Commission Universal Protocol (UP.01.01.01) requires pre-procedure verification, site marking, and a time-out before every invasive procedure to prevent wrong-site, wrong-procedure, and wrong-patient surgery — a sentinel event. CMS Conditions of Participation for Surgical Services (§482.51) mandate that operating rooms are supervised by qualified personnel and that patients receive pre- and post-operative assessments. Retained surgical items (RSI) occur in approximately 1 in 5,500 surgeries and are classified as a Never Event by CMS. Surgical counts, specimen management, and intra-operative documentation are high-stakes nursing responsibilities where errors have direct, often catastrophic, patient consequences.
Checkpoint A — Intake Verification
Pre-Operative Required Documents
Signed informed consent for the procedure (matching the scheduled procedure exactly)
相关技能
History and physical (H&P) completed within 30 days, updated within 24 hours per CMS CoP §482.51
Pre-operative nursing assessment completed
Surgical site marked by the operating surgeon/proceduralist (per Joint Commission UP.01.02.01) for laterality procedures
Allergies verified and documented prominently
NPO status confirmed (per ASA fasting guidelines: 2 hours clear liquids, 6 hours light meal, 8 hours full meal)
Blood type and screen/crossmatch if applicable
Pre-operative laboratory results reviewed: CBC, BMP, coagulation studies, pregnancy test (per institutional policy for reproductive-age females), urinalysis as indicated
Antibiotic prophylaxis ordered per SCIP/CMS specifications (to be administered within 60 minutes of incision; 120 minutes for vancomycin/fluoroquinolones)
VTE prophylaxis plan documented
Implant documentation available if applicable
Pre-Operative Patient Assessment
Two patient identifiers verified (Joint Commission NPSG.01.01.01)
Procedure verified with the patient in their own words
Surgical site confirmed and marking verified
Allergies confirmed verbally and on wristband
Dentures, hearing aids, glasses, jewelry, prosthetics removed and secured
IV access established (gauge appropriate for procedure)
Fire risk assessment (oxidizer, ignition source, fuel)
Blood products available if anticipated need
Anticipated critical events, blood loss estimate, and surgeon-specific concerns
Specimen management plan discussed
Document the time-out: time performed, participants, all elements confirmed
Step 3 — Perform and Document Surgical Counts
AORN Guidelines require counts for sponges, sharps, instruments, and miscellaneous items:
Count Timing
Initial count: Before the procedure begins (baseline) — performed by the circulating RN and scrub person together
Intra-operative counts: Each time a body cavity or deep wound is being closed; when a new item is added to the sterile field; at any change of scrub or circulating personnel
Closing count: Before closure of a body cavity; before wound closure begins
Final count: When skin closure begins; at the end of the procedure
Count Methodology
Sponges: Count each sponge individually; use radiopaque sponges only in the surgical wound; never cut sponges
Both the circulating RN and scrub person count simultaneously, aloud, viewing each item as it is counted
Record all counts on the count sheet; reconcile each count phase against the baseline
Incorrect Count Procedure
If the count is incorrect:
Notify the surgeon immediately
Repeat the count
Search the surgical field, drapes, floor, trash, linen
Obtain intra-operative x-ray if the item is radiopaque and cannot be located
Document the incorrect count, all actions taken, x-ray results, and surgeon notification
File an incident report per institutional policy
Step 4 — Manage Intra-Operative Documentation
The circulating RN documents throughout the procedure:
Patient positioning: Position type (supine, lateral, prone, lithotomy, Trendelenburg), padding and pressure point protection, devices used, positioning performed by whom
Skin preparation: Antiseptic agent, area prepped, prep technique, prep performed by
Electrosurgical unit: Dispersive electrode (grounding pad) placement site and skin condition pre/post
Tourniquet: Location, pressure, inflation/deflation times (total tourniquet time)
Implants: Type, manufacturer, lot number, serial number, expiration date — documented for tracking and recall capability
Specimens: Labeled immediately at the time of removal with patient name, MRN, specimen type, anatomical site, laterality; chain of custody documented
Estimated blood loss (EBL): Quantified in millimeters; blood products administered
Medications: All medications administered on the sterile field and by anesthesia documented per Joint Commission NPSG.03.04.01
Fluid management: Irrigation volumes used (must be reconciled against output to calculate true blood loss)
Time documentation: Patient in room, anesthesia start, incision time, specimen times, count times, closure time, anesthesia end, patient out of room
Step 5 — Manage the Post-Anesthesia Recovery Phase
PACU nursing care (Phase I recovery):
Receive patient with structured handoff from anesthesia provider and OR nurse:
Document all post-operative assessments, interventions, and patient responses
Checkpoint B — Perioperative Documentation Review
Pre-Operative
Consent signed and matches scheduled procedure
H&P current (within 30 days with 24-hour update)
Pre-procedure verification completed and documented
Site marking verified
Intra-Operative
Time-out documented with all required elements
All surgical counts correct and documented (or incorrect count procedure followed)
Specimens labeled and logged with chain of custody
Implant documentation complete with tracking information
All intra-operative events documented with times
Post-Operative
PACU handoff received and documented
Aldrete score ≥ 9 at PACU discharge
Post-operative assessment on unit documented
Post-operative orders implemented
Quality Audit
Universal Protocol compliance: pre-procedure verification, site marking, and time-out completed for 100% of procedures
Surgical count accuracy: correct final count documented; all incorrect counts investigated with incident report
Antibiotic prophylaxis administered within 60 minutes of incision per SCIP measure
VTE prophylaxis implemented per institutional protocol
Specimen management: zero specimen labeling errors
Retained surgical item (RSI) rate: target zero (CMS Never Event)
Surgical site infection rate tracked per NHSN and benchmarked
PACU Aldrete scoring completed per schedule
Perioperative skin injury (positioning-related) documented and trended
Compliant with AORN Guidelines for Perioperative Practice
Compliant with Joint Commission Universal Protocol (UP.01.01.01, UP.01.02.01, UP.01.03.01)
Compliant with CMS CoP for Surgical Services (§482.51)
Guidelines
AORN Guidelines for Perioperative Practice: The definitive evidence-based reference for perioperative nursing — covers every aspect of OR nursing from counts to positioning to fire safety
Joint Commission Universal Protocol: UP.01.01.01 (pre-procedure verification), UP.01.02.01 (site marking), UP.01.03.01 (time-out) — mandatory for all invasive procedures
CMS CoP §482.51: Surgical services must be supervised by qualified personnel; patients must have pre- and post-operative assessments; H&P must be current
SCIP/CMS Core Measures: Antibiotic prophylaxis selection and timing, VTE prophylaxis, normothermia, hair removal (clipper, not razor)
AORN Position Statement on Counts: All sponges, sharps, instruments, and miscellaneous items must be counted; counts must be performed concurrently by two individuals; incorrect counts require defined actions
Specimen management: Joint Commission NPSG.01.01.01 applies — specimens must be labeled in the presence of the patient/procedure with two identifiers
Fire safety: AORN fire risk assessment triangle (oxidizer, ignition source, fuel); most common in procedures near the head/neck with supplemental oxygen
Scope of practice: Circulating RN manages the non-sterile field, documents, performs counts, manages specimens, advocates for the patient under anesthesia; scrub RN/scrub tech manages the sterile field; both participate in counts; RNFA (RN First Assistant) may perform surgical assistance under state Nurse Practice Act authorization
Patient advocacy: The patient under anesthesia cannot advocate for themselves — the perioperative RN serves as the patient's advocate for safety, dignity, and correct care delivery