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“Surgical
Strike” Tactics To Be Adopted For Clinical Use
Efficacy of military strategy yields new surgical
approach
IOWA CITY, IA—At the University of Iowa, the
Department of Surgery has initiated a pilot program inspired by military
tactics used by the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan. Its new Surgical
Strike
Teams, or SSTs, are units of surgery residents, attendings and medical
students
that
can
be rapidly
deployed to the ER or OR to perform procedures.
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Dr. James Waggerty
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Dr. James Waggerty, Ret. U.S. Air Force Commander
and Assistant Chief of Surgery at the University of Iowa, expressed
optimism regarding the program.
“We're
looking at moving in and operating on consults that we get from the
ER even before there's any data back. It's just more efficient to do
the
procedure rather than having to waste time deciding if it's necessary,” he
says.
“Sometimes we know what room the patient
is in, but we don't know their name or which bed, so we just operate
on both patients. It
just saves time.”
Waggerty described a recent mission carried out
by SSTs in the hospital's emergency department last week.
“In that campaign, code-named Operation
Stone Road, we had high-level
reconnaissance indicating a patient with right lower quadrant abdominal
pain present in the triage area. Satellite photos from the ceiling
of the ER confirmed our suspicions, and a coalition of medical students
was dispatched on the ground to move the patient onto an empty
gurney.”
“Next, we had a team of six surgical residents
and one attending rolled in on task chairs, while trained SST nurses
obtained consent, established
IV access, and prepped the patient. A Special Op anesthesiologist
then injected
Versed,
intubated, and administered isoflurane.”
“After the initial incision was made, we commenced
Phase II, in which a second wave of physicians consisting of
twelve surgical residents and two attendings
came in to explore
the region
identified by coalition intelligence as McBurney's Point. At the same
time, the attending and residents from Phase I infiltrated the
remainder of
the ER, performing
laparotomies on any other patient with abdominal pain.”
“Simultaneously, medical students were crawling
the ground on six hospital floors, moving patients and visitors onto
empty
gurneys
to
prepare for Phases III and IV of the campaign.”
Despite the apparent failure of Operation Stone
Road to produce a surgical cause of abdominal pain in the index patient
(who had already had an appendectomy, and whose pain was eventually
determined to be due to constipation), Waggerty describes the
mission as “on the whole, an overwhelming success.”
“We had reliable evidence demonstrating the
likelihood of appendicitis in this patient; of course, that evidence
is classified, so you’ll
just have to trust us. But make no mistake: we acted accordingly, and
the fact that we didn’t find anything ... well, at least our billing’ll
help the hospital turn a nice little profit, won’t it? Case closed.
God Bless America!”
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