Apr 02, 2026
4 mins
Retained surgical items remain one of the most serious and preventable risks in modern healthcare.
A COUNT WAS COMPLETED.
THE PROCEDURE WAS FINISHED.
THE SYSTEM SAID EVERYTHING WAS FINE.
Weeks later, a retained surgical item is discovered.
This isn’t rare.
And it isn’t just human error.
It’s a system problem.
A major investigation by Hearst Newspapers found that:
These are described as “never events.”
But clearly… they’re not never.
The common belief is simple:
If the surgical count is correct, the patient is safe.
But evidence says otherwise.
Studies show that in over 88% of retained swab/sponge cases, counts were recorded as correct
Let that sink in.
The process didn’t fail because people didn’t count.
It failed because the system allowed a false sense of certainty.
Operating theatres are not controlled environments.
They are high-pressure systems where clinicians manage:
And in that environment, the system still relies heavily on:
That’s fragile by design.
Research shows that distractions, complexity, and workflow interruptions significantly increase the risk of retained surgical items.
So this isn’t about individuals making mistakes.
It’s about systems expecting perfection under pressure.
When a retained surgical item is missed:
And in some cases… patients die.
Retained surgical items are widely recognised as “never events” and are classified as sentinel events by The Joint Commission, meaning they are serious, preventable patient safety incidents requiring investigation and system-level response.
If the environment is complex, the solution must match that complexity.
Improving outcomes isn’t about telling clinicians to “be more careful.”
It’s about asking:
Does the system actually support them when things go wrong?
Effective safety systems should:
This aligns with principles from the World Health Organization Surgical Safety Checklist, which emphasises system-based safety over individual vigilance.
iCount was built around one simple idea:
Safety systems should work in real conditions, not ideal ones.
It is designed to:
It doesn’t replace clinicians.
It supports them when the environment is working against them.
Learn more about iCount and surgical counting systems
THE REAL QUESTION
Retained surgical items are still labelled “never events.”
But the evidence says otherwise.
So the real question is:
👉 Is your current process truly designed to prevent them?
Or does it simply assume they won’t happen?
📚 REFERENCES