This talk was presented at the 2018 SAGES Meeting/16th World Congress of Endoscopic Surgery by Kunoor Jain-Spangler during the When Bad Things Happen to Good People: “Emergency Bile Spill Response” on April 12 2018
Keyword(s): aberrant anatomy, age, anatomic landmarks, BDI, bile duct injury, biliary, Calots triangle, carcinoma, cautery, CBD, choledocholithiasis, clip, common bile duct, communication, complication, consent form, critical view of safety, CT scan, CVS, cystic artery, cystic duct, cystic plate, Delphi, diabetes, diagnosis, documentation, elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy, electronic medical record, emergency bile spill response, EMR, equipment, ERCP, experts, fluorescence cholangiography, fundus down technique, gallbladder, guidelines, hepatic artery, hepatic duct, hepatocystic triangle, hypertension, iatrogenic complications, imaging, indocyanine green, inflammatory, infundibular technique, insurance, intraoperative cholangiogram, IOC, lap chole, lawsuit, male, Medicare, medico-legal, Mirizzi syndrome, mortality, obesity, occluded cystic duct, op note, operative note, pain, pitfalls, program director, residency, residents, retraction injuries, right hepatic duct, Rouvieres of sulcus, Safe Cholecystectomy Program, simulator, tertiary care center, thermal injuries, thermal injury, timeout, ultrasound
BDI–39 sec J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci 2017
Anatomic causes of BDI–2:08
Aberrant right hepatic duct on IOC–3:26 Dig Dis Sci 2006
Why do we get sued?–5:07 HPB 2009
Documentation–6:28
Communication–9:45
Preventing a lawsuit–10:43
Critical view of safety–11:09 JACS 2010
Introp timeout–12:10
Abberant anatomy–12:25
Imaging–12:41
Difficult cholecystectomy–14:25 Surg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech A 2011
Prevention–15:09
Summary–16:03