A Quality Improvement Initiative to Reduce Surgical Site Infections in Pediatric Patients Undergoing Cardiothoracic Surgery.

IF 1.2 Q3 PEDIATRICS
Pediatric quality & safety Pub Date : 2025-01-07 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1097/pq9.0000000000000785
Cassidy Golden, Kathy Murphy, Joshua M Rosenblum, Charlotta Eriksson, Parker Dunaway, Mary Lukacs, Lisa Newberry, Michelle E Gleason, Christina J Calamaro, Mohua Basu, Nikhil K Chanani, Subhadra Shashidharan, Michael P Fundora
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Abstract

Introduction: This project aimed to decrease surgical site wound infections (SSIs) to less than 1 per 100 cases in pediatric patients after cardiothoracic surgery.

Methods: A multidisciplinary workgroup was established to identify perioperative risk factors, and educational gaps and create a bedside quality improvement (QI) rounding group to monitor wounds. SSIs were defined according to the Centers for Disease Control National Healthcare Safety Network guidelines. Infection preventionists adjudicated infections as SSIs after an SSI huddle evaluated the case. A QI bundle was developed more than 2 eras: 2015 criteria included an enhanced hygiene bundle, scripted discharge telephone calls about wound care, and 2019 criteria identified SSI risk factors, developed an SSI-QI rounding team, created additional wound care education, and standardized wound care. Data were collected from January 2014 to December 2022 to assess SSI rates per 100 surgical cases, as well as clinically relevant short- and long-term outcomes.

Results: From December 2014 to December 2022, there were 5,610 surgical cases evaluated in SSI-QI rounds. Compared with the preintervention cohort, SSI rates decreased significantly during the intervention (SSI per 100 cases 2.82; 95% confidence interval, 1.94-4.09) and postintervention (SSI per 100 cases 0.55; 95% confidence interval, 0.24-1.26). There were no increases in reoperations, postoperative major complications, or discharge mortality throughout the study.

Conclusions: SSI rates decreased below the goal of 1 per 100 surgical cases. Standardized wound dressings, improving hygiene compliance including bath compliance from 80% to 96.1%, multidisciplinary collaboration, bedside rounds, and postdischarge procedures contributed to lowering and sustaining low SSI rates.

一项旨在减少儿科心胸外科患者手术部位感染的质量改进计划。
简介:本项目旨在将心胸外科手术后儿科患者的手术部位伤口感染(ssi)降低到每100例1例以下。方法:建立多学科工作组,识别围手术期危险因素和教育差距,并建立床边质量改善(QI)围合组对伤口进行监测。ssi是根据疾病控制中心国家医疗安全网络指南定义的。感染预防专家在对病例进行SSI评估后判定感染为SSI。QI包的制定超过了两个时代:2015年的标准包括增强的卫生包,关于伤口护理的脚本出院电话,2019年的标准确定了SSI风险因素,建立了SSI-QI小组,创建了额外的伤口护理教育,并标准化了伤口护理。收集2014年1月至2022年12月的数据,以评估每100例手术病例的SSI发生率,以及临床相关的短期和长期结果。结果:2014年12月至2022年12月,SSI-QI查房共评估5610例手术病例。与干预前队列相比,干预期间SSI率显著下降(每100例SSI 2.82;95%可信区间1.94-4.09)和干预后(每100例SSI 0.55;95%置信区间0.24-1.26)。在整个研究过程中,再手术、术后主要并发症或出院死亡率均未增加。结论:SSI发生率降低到每100例手术病例1例的目标以下。标准化的伤口敷料、提高卫生依从性(包括从80%到96.1%的沐浴依从性)、多学科合作、床边查房和出院后程序有助于降低和维持较低的SSI发生率。
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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CiteScore
2.20
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