Reuse of Surgical Masks During the COVID-19 Shortage: Association with the Incidence of Surgical Site Infections.

Zsombor T Gal, Ashley Y Albano, David C Landy, Arun Aneja, Arjun Srinath
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Abstract

The association between the reuse of surgical masks (SMs) for multiple procedures and rates of surgical site infections (SSIs) is unclear. Hence, the purpose of this study was to determine whether a policy mandating the reuse of SMs was associated with increased SSI incidence. It was hypothesized the rate of SSIs would be significantly greater during the postimplementation period compared with the preimplementation period. Retrospective chart review of patients who underwent orthopaedic and general surgery during the 60 days before and after policy implementation was performed. Focus was on consecutive procedures performed by the same surgeon on the same day. An assessment of SSI risk factors suggested the postimplementation group was at higher risk. However, the daily use of a single SM across multiple procedures was not associated with a clinically significant increase in SSIs. Because future pandemics and public health crises may be accompanied by similar shortages, it may be possible to reuse masks in these situations without concern for increased SSI. (Journal of Surgical Orthopaedic Advances 33(2):097-102, 2024).

在 COVID-19 短缺期间重复使用手术面罩:与手术部位感染发生率的关系。
在多个手术中重复使用外科口罩(SM)与手术部位感染(SSI)率之间的关系尚不清楚。因此,本研究旨在确定强制重复使用外科口罩的政策是否与 SSI 发生率增加有关。假设实施后与实施前相比,SSI 的发生率会明显增加。对政策实施前后 60 天内接受骨科和普通外科手术的患者进行了回顾性病历审查。重点是同一外科医生在同一天进行的连续手术。对 SSI 风险因素的评估表明,政策实施后的组别风险更高。然而,每天在多个手术中使用单个 SM 与 SSI 的临床显著增加无关。由于未来的流行病和公共卫生危机可能会伴随着类似的短缺,因此在这些情况下重复使用口罩而不必担心会增加 SSI。(外科骨科进展杂志》33(2):097-102,2024 年)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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