Abstract
ObjectivesThis study evaluates the effectiveness of interventions aimed at improving compliance with intraoperative consultation (IOC) documentation standards within the health system in Manitoba, Canada.MethodsA quality improvement study assessed IOC documentation quality within Shared Health Manitoba system. Audits of 60 consecutive IOC cases (specimens) annually (2021-2023) evaluated frozen section (FS) requisitions, final pathology reports, and quality assurance (QA) review entries. Interventions included education sessions, email reminders, posters, and a trial of checklist stickers, though the latter was unsuccessful. Statistical analyses assessed documentation trends.ResultsInterventions led to some significant but inconsistent improvements. Overall documentation completeness improved in IOC requisitions from 2021 to 2022 (p = 0.0245, 95% CI = 3.69, 38.16) but not in 2023. QA review entries also showed significant improvement in the second audit in 2022, but not in the third audit in 2023 (2021 vs 2022: 0.0327, although the 95% CI lower bound was slightly negative (-2.55, 19.05). No overall significant improvements were observed in final report IOC documentation.ConclusionTargeted interventions improved some IOC documentation aspects, but sustained success requires addressing systemic challenges through ongoing education and workflow optimization to enhance IOC-related documentation quality.