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Preventing infection in general surgery: improvements through education of surgeons by surgeons

Preventing infection in general surgery: improvements through education of surgeons by surgeons
Preventing infection in general surgery: improvements through education of surgeons by surgeons
Surgical patients are at particular risk of healthcare-associated infection (HCAI) due to the presence of a surgical site leading to surgical site infection (SSI), and because of the need for intravascular access resulting in catheter-related bloodstream infection (CRBSI). A two-year initiative commenced with an initial audit of surgical practice; this was used to inform the development of a targeted educational initiative by surgeons specifically for surgical trainees. Parameters assessed during the initial audit and a further audit after the educational initiative were related to intra- and postoperative aspects of the prevention of SSIs, as well as care of peripheral venous catheters (PVCs) in surgical patients. The proportion of prophylactic antibiotics administered prior to incision across 360 operations increased from 30.0% to 59.1% (P<0.001). Surgical site dressings were observed in 234 patients, and a significant decrease was found in the percentage of dressings that were tampered with during the initial 48h after surgery (16.5% vs 6.2%, P=0.030). In total, 574 PVCs were assessed over the two-year period. Improvements were found in the proportion of unnecessary PVCs in situ (37.9% vs 24.4%, P<0.001), PVCs in situ for >72h (10.6% vs 3.1%, P<0.001) and PVCs covered with clean and intact dressings (87.3% vs 97.6%, P<0.001). Significant improvements in surgical practice were established for the prevention of SSI and CRBSI through a focused educational programme developed by and for surgeons. Potentially, other specific measures may also be warranted to achieve further improvements in infection prevention in surgical practice
0195-6701
312-316
McHugh, S.M.
a308a6b6-0f2e-483f-9955-3d03d67c4ffa
Corrigan, M.A.
1494fea5-b4e0-4f2f-8936-f07b5655699f
Dimitrov, B.D.
366d715f-ffd9-45a1-8415-65de5488472f
Cowman, S.
08e4bcee-a931-4391-813d-7f19661339a5
Tierney, S.
33474680-7d7f-4cca-aa20-891b0b16df22
Hill, A.D.K
6d08b623-af42-4ce6-9bd5-3a8946f14102
Humphreys, H.
32f82446-313f-4cfb-beff-63d50ccc54b9
McHugh, S.M.
a308a6b6-0f2e-483f-9955-3d03d67c4ffa
Corrigan, M.A.
1494fea5-b4e0-4f2f-8936-f07b5655699f
Dimitrov, B.D.
366d715f-ffd9-45a1-8415-65de5488472f
Cowman, S.
08e4bcee-a931-4391-813d-7f19661339a5
Tierney, S.
33474680-7d7f-4cca-aa20-891b0b16df22
Hill, A.D.K
6d08b623-af42-4ce6-9bd5-3a8946f14102
Humphreys, H.
32f82446-313f-4cfb-beff-63d50ccc54b9

McHugh, S.M., Corrigan, M.A., Dimitrov, B.D., Cowman, S., Tierney, S., Hill, A.D.K and Humphreys, H. (2011) Preventing infection in general surgery: improvements through education of surgeons by surgeons. Journal of Hospital Infection, 78 (4), 312-316. (doi:10.1016/j.jhin.2011.03.023). (PMID:21640433)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Surgical patients are at particular risk of healthcare-associated infection (HCAI) due to the presence of a surgical site leading to surgical site infection (SSI), and because of the need for intravascular access resulting in catheter-related bloodstream infection (CRBSI). A two-year initiative commenced with an initial audit of surgical practice; this was used to inform the development of a targeted educational initiative by surgeons specifically for surgical trainees. Parameters assessed during the initial audit and a further audit after the educational initiative were related to intra- and postoperative aspects of the prevention of SSIs, as well as care of peripheral venous catheters (PVCs) in surgical patients. The proportion of prophylactic antibiotics administered prior to incision across 360 operations increased from 30.0% to 59.1% (P<0.001). Surgical site dressings were observed in 234 patients, and a significant decrease was found in the percentage of dressings that were tampered with during the initial 48h after surgery (16.5% vs 6.2%, P=0.030). In total, 574 PVCs were assessed over the two-year period. Improvements were found in the proportion of unnecessary PVCs in situ (37.9% vs 24.4%, P<0.001), PVCs in situ for >72h (10.6% vs 3.1%, P<0.001) and PVCs covered with clean and intact dressings (87.3% vs 97.6%, P<0.001). Significant improvements in surgical practice were established for the prevention of SSI and CRBSI through a focused educational programme developed by and for surgeons. Potentially, other specific measures may also be warranted to achieve further improvements in infection prevention in surgical practice

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e-pub ahead of print date: 6 June 2011
Published date: August 2011
Organisations: Primary Care & Population Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 337416
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/337416
ISSN: 0195-6701
PURE UUID: 181806d2-d307-4287-a759-ee5dd74b3a3b

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Date deposited: 25 Apr 2012 14:31
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 10:53

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Contributors

Author: S.M. McHugh
Author: M.A. Corrigan
Author: B.D. Dimitrov
Author: S. Cowman
Author: S. Tierney
Author: A.D.K Hill
Author: H. Humphreys

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