Journal Surg Ward Borja
Journal Surg Ward Borja
Journal Surg Ward Borja
School of Nursing
Journal
In partial fulfillment of NCM 106A
Submitted by:
Manglapus, Giana L.
BSNIV-A3
November 5, 2018
Surgical InfectionsVol. 19, No. 3 Original Articles
Abstract
Background: Surgical site infections (SSIs) are the leading cause of hospital-acquired
infections and are associated with substantial healthcare costs, with increased morbidity
and mortality. To investigate the effects of the antibiotic stewardship program on
prevention and control of SSI during clean surgery, we investigated this situation in our
institution.
Results: From January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2016, 41,426 patients underwent
clean surgeries in a grade III, class A hospital. The rate of prophylactic antibiotic use in
the 41,426 clean surgeries was reduced from 82.9% to 28.0% after the interventions.
The rate of antibiotic agents administered within 120 minutes of the first incision
increased from 20.8% to 85.1%. The rate at which prophylactic antimicrobial agents
were discontinued in the first 24 hours after surgery increased from 22.1% to 60.4%.
Appropriate antibiotic selection increased from 37.0% to 93.6%. Prophylactic antibiotic
re-dosing increased from 3.8% to 64.8%. The SSI rate decreased from 0.7% to 0.5% (p
< 0.05). The pathogen detection rate increased from 16.7% up to 41.8% after
intervention. The intensity of antibiotic consumption reduced from 74.9 defined daily
doses (DDDs) per 100 bed-days to 34.2 DDDs per 100 bed-days after the interventions.
Crader, M. B. (2017). Preoperative Antibiotic Prophylaxis. National Center for Biotechnology Information.
Liu, J. e. (2018). Impact of the Antibiotic Stewardship Program on Prevention and Control of Surgical Site
Infection during Peri-Operative Clean Surgery. Surgical Infections.