Reducing surgical site infections through quality improvement initiative: A tertiary cardiac care facility experience in a developing country
<p>Introduction: Amongst healthcare associated infections (HAIs), surgical site infections (SSIs) are a preventable cause of increased morbidity and mortality and are associated with substantial financial costs. SSI rates are an indicator of the quality of surgical and postoperative care, whic...
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Format: | Book |
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Journal of Surgery and Surgical Research - Peertechz Publications,
2018-08-20.
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Summary: | <p>Introduction: Amongst healthcare associated infections (HAIs), surgical site infections (SSIs) are a preventable cause of increased morbidity and mortality and are associated with substantial financial costs. SSI rates are an indicator of the quality of surgical and postoperative care, which necessitates the need for robust surveillance systems for these healthcare associated infections. Patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) are at a greater risk for infection due to their relatively older age and the presence of comorbid conditions like diabetes mellitus and obesity.</p><p>Objective: To establish the adult cardiothoracic surgical site infections registry to determine adult surgical site infection (SSI) rates and study impact of quality improvement initiatives on SSI rates.</p><p>Methods: The Adult Cardiothoracic SSI registry was developed at Armed Forces Institute of Cardiology and National Institute of Heart Disease, Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Monthly SSI rates were monitored for both CABG and Valvular heart surgeries inclusive of chest and leg SSIs instituted to control the increased SSI rate in September 2016 after a multidisciplinary approach.</p><p>Results: A total number of 2640 cardiac surgeries were carried out and the cumulative SSI rate was 2.0% (54) for a period of two year i.e. July 2016 to July 2018. The SSI rate for chest infections was 19.0% (10) and for leg wound (harvest site) infections was 81.0% (44). There was an increase in SSI rate 5% (04) during September 2016. After process improvements the rate declined to 1% in October 2016 and has remained less than or equal to 2% as of July 2018.</p><p>Conclusion: A high SSI rate was investigated and multi-modal process improvements and infection control measures were implemented, leading to a decrease in SSI rate from 4.0% to 2.0%.</p> |
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DOI: | 10.17352/2455-2968.000052 |