Outpatient Surgery Magazine - Subscribers

2018 Salary Survey - Outpatient Surgery Magazine - January 2019

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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suck up the smoke. It's not that way anymore. Quiet evacuators are built right into the pencil. "Oftentimes, if you get the opportunity to hear out the sur- geons and you put a good, rele- vant pencil in their hand that they can use, they'll tell you, 'That's not so bad,'" says Mr. Palmerton. But getting a surgeon-champion is not as easy as it sounds. "Surgeons tell me that they've been doing this for 30 years and the smoke hasn't killed them yet," says Mr. Palmerton. His response to that? He makes sure the surgeons understand that there are other people in the OR — nurses, techs — some young, some perhaps who may be pregnant, that are also being affected by the smoke. "Surgeons will say, 'You know, that's a good point.' The surgeon is just one person, and it's not really fair that one person gets to not care while everybody else is at risk," says Mr. Palmerton. Through that continued awareness, though, there is less and less resistance to smoke evacuation protocol. Although the dangers of sur- gical smoke have been investigated for decades, Mr. Palmerton says the lack of solid research about it feeds into surgeon resistance. "That type of research would be difficult to do, but how much do you really need to understand that breathing ablated human tissue that is shown to be carcinogenic, with neurotoxins and that is viral, is bad?" he says. "It gets to the point of common sense. If somebody was standing in the OR smoking a cigarette in the corner, you wouldn't accept it." OSM J A N U A R Y 2 0 1 9 • O U T PA T I E N T S U R G E R Y. N E T • 8 9 • SECONDHAND SMOKE It's not enough to have smoke evacuators in place. They've got to be in use — regardless of surgeon preference.

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