Type of publication:
Systematic Review
Author(s):
Parmar, Dilen; *Patel, Neil; Kenneth-Ogah, Catherine; Yazdouni, Sadat; Desai, Chaitya; Raveshia, Dimit; Patel, Ravi.
Citation:
Patient Safety in Surgery [Electronic Resource]. 2026 Jan 08.
Abstract:
Background
Never-events represent serious and preventable patient safety incidents within surgical practice, despite increasing national and international efforts to reduce them. Persistent concerns regarding wrong site surgery, retained surgical items, and incorrect implants highlight the need to understand contributory human factors and system-level weaknesses.
Methods
A systematic search of PubMed/Medline, Google Scholar, and the Cochrane Library was conducted. Evidence published between 2014 and 2024 was screened according to predefined eligibility criteria to identify contemporary data relating to surgical never-events. Studies were assessed using standardised selection methods and relevant findings were extracted and synthesised.
Results
Thirty-seven studies met inclusion criteria. Across international literature, recurring contributory factors included communication breakdowns, reduced situational awareness, fatigue, inadequate staffing, inconsistent team composition, and increasing surgical caseloads. Despite advances in safety practices, these factors continued to contribute to adverse surgical outcomes.
Conclusion
Never-events remain a persistent challenge in surgical care. Strengthening safety management systems, improving awareness of human factors, and prioritising non-technical skills training may help reduce the risk of these events. Ongoing evaluation of interventions and further UK-based research are required to support improvement in patient safety outcomes.
Data availability
All data generated or analysed in this study are derived from published articles and are included within this manuscript and its supplementary materials.
DOI: 10.1186/s13037-025-00474-8
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