Risk Factors for Developing Community-Acquired Hand Infections at a Large-Volume Urban Safety Net Hospital.

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 SURGERY
Annals of Plastic Surgery Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-11 DOI:10.1097/SAP.0000000000004119
Raymond Yin, Mica Rosser, Matthew F Mclaughlin, Daniel Soroudi, Alap U Patel, Ryan Sadjadi, Scott L Hansen
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Abstract

Background: Hand infections represent a significant burden for both health care systems and their patients. Epidemiological understanding of community-acquired hand infections is limited. This study examined a cohort of hand infection patients at a large urban safety net hospital for characteristics that were associated with protective and/or risk factors for hand infections.

Methods: We performed a retrospective chart review for all patients who required hand surgery consultation in the emergency department during a 1-year period (2021-2022). County-level population characteristics were obtained through the county-level data sources. We then performed a risk ratio (RR) analysis for demographic and socioeconomic characteristics.

Results: A total of 125 patients were included in the study cohort. Cisgender male (RR, 4.654; P < 0.001), Black (RR, 6.062; P < 0.001) and American Indian/Alaska Native (RR, 3.293; P = 0.041) patients were found to be overrepresented in our cohort when compared to county proportions, indicating an association with increased risk of hand infections. Patients between 35 and 49 years of age were also found to have an increased risk (RR, 1.679; P = 0.005). Age over 65 years, retirement, and employment were found to be protective factors (RR, 0.341 [ P = 0.001]; RR, 0.397 [ P = 0.043]; RR, 0.197 [ P < 0.001]). In contrast, unemployment and unstable housing (unhoused or shelter) were found to have strong harmful risk for necessitating hand infection consults (RR, 7.587 [ P < 0.001]; RR, 235.715 [ P < 0.001]; RR, 29.990 [ P < 0.001]).

Conclusions: There are clear risk factors at play for hand infection incidence. We found that housing status, employment, race, gender, and age were some of the most important contributors for incidence. This information can assist clinicians and public officials in developing more specific screening algorithms and prevention tools to reduce systematic burden. Further studies are required to elucidate specific etiologies associated with hand infection risk.

大容量城市安全网医院发生社区获得性手部感染的风险因素。
背景:手部感染给医疗保健系统及其患者都带来了沉重负担。流行病学对社区获得性手部感染的了解十分有限。本研究对一家大型城市安全网医院的手部感染患者队列进行了调查,以了解与手部感染的保护因素和/或风险因素相关的特征:我们对一年内(2021-2022 年)急诊科所有需要手外科会诊的患者进行了回顾性病历审查。我们通过县级数据源获得了县级人口特征。然后,我们对人口和社会经济特征进行了风险比(RR)分析:共有 125 名患者被纳入研究队列。与县级比例相比,我们发现顺性别男性(RR,4.654;P < 0.001)、黑人(RR,6.062;P < 0.001)和美国印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民(RR,3.293;P = 0.041)患者在队列中的比例过高,这表明手部感染风险增加。年龄在 35 至 49 岁之间的患者的风险也有所增加(RR,1.679;P = 0.005)。65岁以上、退休和就业是保护因素(RR,0.341 [P = 0.001];RR,0.397 [P = 0.043];RR,0.197 [P <0.001])。与此相反,失业和住房不稳定(无住房或有住房)对手部感染就诊有很大的危害(RR,7.587 [P < 0.001];RR,235.715 [P < 0.001];RR,29.990 [P < 0.001]):结论:手部感染发病率有明显的风险因素。我们发现,住房状况、就业、种族、性别和年龄是影响发病率的最重要因素。这些信息可以帮助临床医生和政府官员制定更具体的筛查算法和预防工具,以减轻系统性负担。还需要进一步的研究来阐明与手部感染风险相关的具体病因。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
13.30%
发文量
584
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: The only independent journal devoted to general plastic and reconstructive surgery, Annals of Plastic Surgery serves as a forum for current scientific and clinical advances in the field and a sounding board for ideas and perspectives on its future. The journal publishes peer-reviewed original articles, brief communications, case reports, and notes in all areas of interest to the practicing plastic surgeon. There are also historical and current reviews, descriptions of surgical technique, and lively editorials and letters to the editor.
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