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.

  • 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

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.

  • 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.
  • 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 18:25
  • by 127.0.0.1