Outpatient Surgery Magazine

In & Out - May 2017 - Subscribe to Outpatient Surgery Magazine

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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that way? Not if Dr. Hedley can help it. Lucky to be alive, let alone back to reconstructing hips and knees at the Phoenix, Ariz.-based Hedley Orthopaedic Institute, Dr. Hedley is on a cru- sade to encourage surgeons who use electrocautery to use a smoke evacu- ating pencil. "It could save your life," he says. Help could be coming in the form of smoke evacuation legislation out of California, which would become the first U.S. state to make surgical smoke evacuation mandatory. Assembly Bill 402 would require California healthcare facilities to use "plume-scavenging systems" in any setting in which a surgeon's use of an electrocautery device or any other electrosur- gical device creates surgical smoke. The bill would also require manufac- turers of smoke-evacuation systems to provide evidence that their systems meet specified minimum requirements when installed, operated and main- tained as instructed. California lawmakers attempted to pass similar legislation last year, but Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed it. It is hoped that if California passes a law that makes smoke evacuation mandatory, other states will follow suit. Until that time, Dr. Hedley urges you take it upon yourself to protect your surgeons, staff and patients by adopting technology that eliminates surgical smoke. Smoke evacuation pencils with built-in or clip-on suction tips that remove smoke and particles at the source are a simple and inex- pensive way to bring smoke evacuation capabilities to your ORs, he says. "The advent of these evacuation tips is a very solid thing. I think we need to spread the word," says Dr. Hedley. "The only downside is they're a little more cumbersome to handle than a standard Bovie. The suction tip comes with a tube attached the makes it a little unwieldy. Just persevere and get used to it. Accept a little bit of inconvenience for the sake of everyone else in the OR." OSM J A N U A R Y 2 0 1 7 • O U T PA T I E N TS U R G E R Y. N E T • 9

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