Enhancing surgical safety through surgical instruments repair technicians’ training: recent experience from Nigeria
Chisom R. Udeigwe-Okeke, Justina O. Seyi-Olajide, Aderonke O. Obisesan, Keith Miles, Nkeiruka Obi, Emmanuel A. Ameh

TL;DR
A training program in Nigeria improved surgical instrument maintenance, boosting safety and repair confidence among healthcare workers.
Contribution
The SIRT program offers a scalable, sustainable model for training technicians in LMICs to maintain surgical instruments.
Findings
36 participants repaired 1,623 instruments with a 99.6% success rate.
83.3% of participants felt more confident identifying faulty instruments post-training.
Institutional workbenches were established in 50% of hospitals.
Abstract
Faulty or poorly maintained surgical instruments increase risks of complications, prolong operating times, and reduce efficiency, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). To address this, Nigeria introduced the Surgical Instruments Repair Technicians (SIRT) program, to improve instrument safety. This study evaluated the SIRT program’s initial impact, sustainability, and scalability for improved surgical instrument maintenance in LMICs. The program was deployed in two phases. Phase one involved online theoretical and hands-on training for biomedical technicians and operating room/central sterile supply department nurses from Smile Train partner and public hospitals across Nigeria’s six geopolitical zones. Participants were provided repair kits to establish institutional workbenches. Phase two focused on expanding training with a one-week hands-on program. Data on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical Malpractice and Liability Issues
