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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, January 3, 2017
Flawed and Poor Quality Surgical Instruments Place Patients at Risk
The BBC documentary, “Surgery’s Dirty Secrets,” which originally aired
in 2011, investigates the sources of surgical tools, and highlights
flaws in British safety regulations.
If you’re like most, you probably assume that surgical instruments are
made to the very highest, exacting standards. The reality of where and
how these tools are made is downright shocking.
According to BBC reporter Samantha Poling, who spent a year
investigating this topic, there are significant problems in the industry
— problems that can, and have, caused severe illness and death.
An estimated 30 million operations are carried out in British hospitals
each year. In order to perform, surgeons need the right tools for the
job, and these tools must be made to exact specifications and be of the
highest quality.
Poorly made or non-functioning surgical tools can mean the difference
between a successful surgery and the loss of a limb or organ, or death
of the patient.
For example, for each fraction of a second a surgical assistant is
struggling with a poorly functioning arterial clamp, the patient is
losing blood, compromising the success of the surgery.
Lethal Infections Spread by Surgical Tools
In 2009, Dorothy Brown underwent heart surgery at Nottingham City
Hospital. While the operation was a success, she contracted an antibiotic-resistant infection that
nearly claimed her life. Ten other patients operated on by Brown’s
surgeon around the same time contracted the same lethal infection.
Five of them subsequently died. In the U.S., the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) reports at least 1,000 incidences where poor
quality surgical instruments have caused harm each year.
A confidential report obtained by Poling reveals the two most likely
causes of the mass infection at Nottingham City Hospital were either air
born bacteria or micro-punctures in the surgeon’s gloves. As a result
of the internal investigation, surgeons must now wear thicker gloves or
double-up on regular gloves.
But what would repeatedly cause micro-punctures in the surgeon’s gloves
in the first place? According to experts, the most likely cause is poor
quality surgical instruments.
While few medical professionals were willing to go on record with the
BBC, Tom Brophy, a lead technologist with Barts Health NHS (National
Health Service) Trust, did. Deeply concerned about what he’s been
seeing, he has started collecting evidence showing just how defective
some surgical tools are.
Most of these defects cannot be seen with the naked eye, but under
magnification, jagged edges and poor quality construction becomes
readily evident. Common problems reported by Brophy include:
- Fractured and re-welded instruments, which can harbor and spread bacteria
- Sharp, protruding guide pins on forceps that can lacerate gloves
- Sharp burs and metal fragments that can break off, lacerating gloves and/or pose an infection risk if deposited inside the patient
- Corrosion and pitted metals that can pose an infection risk
- Faulty screw heads
1 in 5 Surgical Instruments Is Flawed
According to Brophy, 1 in 5 instruments, or about 20 percent of all
instruments he receives, are rejected due to flaws that place patients’
health at risk. He even reports receiving used equipment where blood and
dried tissue could pose an infection risk.
These tools are somehow recycled and passed off as brand new — something
that simply should not occur. Yet it’s happening. Poorly constructed
instruments also should not enter the surgical suite, yet they do with
frightening frequency. How is all of this possible?
In the U.K., manufacturers and suppliers of surgical instruments must be
registered with the Medicines and Health Care Products Regulatory
Agency (MHRA), and there are over 900 manufacturers registered.
In December, 2010, following mounting complaints about shoddy quality,
the agency issued a warning to all manufacturers saying steps must be
implemented to ensure that all instruments are “fit for purpose.”
However, the responsibility for ensuring that quality standards are
actually met still rests with the manufacturers, not the MHRA or any
separate quality control agency. The suppliers are not even required to
inspect the products received from the manufacturer before re-selling
them to a hospital.
In all, there are 180 health trusts and boards in the U.K., but Barts is
the only health trust that actually employs a technologist to inspect
all the instruments before they’re used in surgery.
Disturbingly, when Brophy sent back rejected instruments to an Asian
supplier, he was told that the instruments were sent out to another U.K.
hospital that accepted them without issue. “Well, of course they’re
going to accept them,” Brophy says, “because they haven’t checked them.”
Where Are Surgical Tools Made?
Thoughts of Swiss-made precision come to mind when considering how
surgical tools are made, but two-thirds of the world’s surgical
instruments are actually manufactured in Sialkot, located in the
northern Punjab area of Pakistan.
Seventy percent of the 900 surgical tool manufacturers registered with the MHRA are based there.
Some of these manufacturers appear to be doing a decent job, including
Hilbro, which is one of the largest manufacturers. Each instrument is at
least visually inspected with a magnifying glass before being sent out.
Others operate under far more questionable circumstances.
Regal Medical Instruments, a small manufacturer in Sialkot that sends
their wares to two small-scale suppliers in the U.K., offers a wholly
different view of the industry. The facility is so dark you can barely
see, and metal dust fills the air. Surgical instruments lie scattered in
piles on the floor.
In their quality assurance department, employees visually inspect each
instrument before stamping it with the requisite “CE” quality stamp
required by the MHRA, but no magnifying glass is used. This means most
defects caught by Brophy — who uses a microscope — will never ever be
caught.
Then there’s “the ramshackle side to the industry,” to use Poling’s
words. In this part of town, workers toil away at their grindstones in
tiny dust-filled shacks with open sewers flowing past their doorways.
According to Poling, larger, respectable companies frequently outsource
work to these workers in order to meet demand.
In all, there are more than 3,000 of these “outsourcing units” in
Sialkot, and these workers make less than $2.50 per day. According to
some of the workers, both Hilbro and Regal Medical regularly buy
surgical instruments from them.
‘Made in Germany’ — Not Quite!
Remarkably, the maker’s mark on these Pakistani-made tools will often say “Made in Germany.” As explained by Poling:
“Under EU law, the instruments made in these backstreets can be stamped with another country’s name so long as that country helps substantially transform the product. So, as the forged steel they’re working with here comes from Germany, the whole thing can be stamped ‘Made in Germany,’ and German instruments sell for much more than those stamped ‘Made in Pakistan.’”
Making matters worse, British suppliers rarely conduct quality
inspections of their Pakistani manufacturers’ facilities. Part of the
problem is the constant risk of terror attacks in Pakistan. It’s a
dangerous area, and carrying out inspections in person is risky. Poling
also found evidence suggesting the Pakistani surgical tool industry may
be using child labor.
The MHRA declined meeting with Poling, but provided her with a statement
saying they have “no evidence that non-compliant instruments are being
supplied to the NHS.” Meanwhile, Brophy inspected the 19 instrument
samples collected by Poling during her Pakistani trip, where she visited
over 100 different instrument manufacturing facilities. Twelve of the
19 samples failed his inspection.
Poling even unearthed illegal activities during her investigation. While
legal loopholes allow for a Pakistani manufacturer to label his goods
as “Made in Germany” if the steel used is from Germany, it is illegal to
use Pakistani or French steel, for example, and mark it as being
German-made.
Undercover footage, in which she poses as a supplier of surgical instruments, shows two U.K.
representatives of Regal Medical Instruments offering to sell her tools
made with Pakistani steel stamped “Made in Germany,” so that she would
then be able to resell them at an inflated price. According to the
Pakistani representatives, they are already selling mid-priced French
steel instruments to suppliers that bear the German mark, per the
suppliers’ requests.
Non-Disposable Equipment Also Carries Contamination Risks
As discussed in my interview with Dr. David Lewis, a retired
microbiologist with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) last year,
non-disposable tools such as flexible sigmoidoscopes and colonoscopies are
also risky for the patient. Since they must be reused, these tools
require cleaning and sterilization before each use, both inside and out.
However, testing reveals that this is virtually impossible, and the
disinfection process used by most clinics and hospitals fails to
properly clean and sterilize these tools.
As a result, patients take great chances when these tools are used on
them, as they can spread all manner of infections from one patient to
another. There is a solution: create flexible scopes that can be
autoclaved (heat sterilized). But manufacturers have not been pressured
to come up with such a design. As noted by Lewis, it really boils down
to federal agencies failing to take the contamination issue seriously
enough.
If you’re having a colonoscopy done, or any other procedure where a
flexible endoscope will be used, be sure to ask how it is cleaned, and
which cleaning agent is being used.
- If the hospital or clinic uses peracetic acid, your likelihood of contracting an infection from a previous patient is very slim.
- If the answer is glutaraldehyde, or the brand name Cidex (which is what 80 percent of clinics use), cancel your appointment and go elsewhere.
Asking what they use to clean the scope is a key question that could
save your life. It’s important that we all start to do this because the
FDA simply does not have the incentive to take action on it.
However, once enough people refuse to have these procedures done with
glutaraldehyde-sterilized instruments, then clinics and hospitals will
change, even if the FDA does nothing. It’s also crucial that health care
professionals who are reading this start addressing the issue from the
inside. You really need to be aware of this issue, and how it’s placing
patients at risk.
As for flawed surgical tools, there’s very little you as a patient can
do about it. Ideally, hospitals everywhere would hire someone to
carefully inspect all surgical tools prior to use. In all, Poling’s
report reveals there is much room for improvement in this industry, if
we are to place patient welfare first.