Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ===== Acceptable Risk Policy ===== An **acceptable risk policy** defines the maximum complication rate that an institution, department, or surgical training program considers tolerable for a specific procedure, patient population, or supervision level. This policy directly influences the **reference value (k)** used in CUSUM analysis and helps determine when performance remains within safe boundaries. ==== Why It’s Important ==== * Establishes **clear expectations** for surgical quality * Serves as a benchmark for **performance evaluation** * Promotes **fair comparison** across individuals and teams * Guides decisions about **training thresholds**, credentialing, and escalation of care ==== How to Define Acceptable Risk ==== The acceptable risk should be based on: * **Historical institutional data** * **Evidence from peer-reviewed literature** * **Patient safety standards** * **Level of supervision** * **Case complexity profiles** Example (for ICP Monitor Placement): * Acceptable complication rate (infection, hemorrhage, malposition): **10%** → Set ''k = 0.10'' in CUSUM formula In high-risk populations or emergency settings, a slightly higher threshold (e.g., 12–15%) may be reasonable. ==== Policy Implementation Tips ==== * Define acceptable risk levels **per procedure**. * Document policies in surgical protocols or quality assurance guidelines. * **Review annually** to adapt to changing technologies, training levels, or outcome data. * Ensure all surgeons and trainees are **aware of the defined thresholds**. ==== Integration with CUSUM ==== * The acceptable risk policy provides the **reference rate** for CUSUM. * Deviations from this benchmark are interpreted within the policy’s context. * Helps distinguish between **random variation** and **true underperformance**. Having a well-defined acceptable risk policy ensures that performance monitoring is **transparent, consistent, and ethically grounded**. acceptable_risk_policy.txt Last modified: 2025/04/08 18:25by 127.0.0.1