Environmental and financial cost of surgical-site infection by severity after lower limb vascular surgery.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q1 SURGERY
BJS Open Pub Date : 2025-05-07 DOI:10.1093/bjsopen/zraf015
Ross Lathan, Hannah Daysley, Bharadhwaj Ravindhran, Arthur Lim, Joseph Cutteridge, Misha Sidapra, Judith Long, Louise Hitchman, Pedro Beltran-Alvarez, Daniel Carradice, George Smith, Ian Chetter
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Abstract

Background: There is sparse evidence of the relationship between environmental and financial costs of surgical-site infection. Identifying areas of high-cost burden would enable key targets for clinical interventions to aid in achieving the UK national net zero healthcare system strategies. The aim of this study was to evaluate the environmental and financial costs of surgical-site infection, subclassified by severity of infection.

Methods: This prospective observational study evaluated patients with and without surgical-site infection after a variety of lower limb vascular surgery using National Health Service and Personal and Social Services perspectives. The severity of surgical-site infection was defined using both Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and management-based criteria where patients with mild surgical-site infection required oral antibiotics, patients with moderate surgical-site infection required intravenous antibiotics, and patients with severe surgical-site infection required further surgical interventions.

Results: A total of 99 patients were included, with 22 patients (22.2%) diagnosed with surgical-site infection. The mean(s.d.) environmental cost without surgical-site infection was 10.3(24.3) kgCO2e (95% c.i. 4.8 to 15.9) per patient. Emissions increased with surgical-site infection severity, with mild producing 94.6(53.9) kgCO2e (95% c.i. 63.5 to 125.8, 918% increase), moderate producing 648(407.6) kgCO2e (95% c.i. -0.1 to 1296.6, 6291% increase) and severe producing 2651.4(2217.1) kgCO2e (95% c.i. -966.5 to 6347.2, 25 742% increase) per patient. The mean(s.d.) financial cost without surgical-site infection was €73.26(€160.27) (95% c.i. 36.91 to 109.72) that increased with severity, with mild costing €392.25(225.69) (95% c.i. 262.16 to 523.00, 536% increase), moderate costing €9754.46(5059.77) (95% c.i. 1704.65 to 17 820.68, 13 317% increase), and severe costing €37 035.60(32 910.84) (95% c.i. -15 376.07 to 89 447.52, 50 521% increase) per episode of infection (£1 = €1.20 (conversion date 25 October 2024)).

Conclusion: Environmental and financial costs are strongly correlated with surgical-site infection severity and display an exponential increase as severity increases. Overall, surgical-site infection incurs a cost of €15.58 for every kgCO2e produced. Environmental discounting should be explored and incorporated into sustainability assessments for robust accounting methodology. Surgical-site infection should be evaluated for severity rather than as a binary outcome for comprehensive assessment.

下肢血管手术后手术部位感染严重程度的环境和经济成本。
背景:很少有证据表明手术部位感染的环境和经济成本之间的关系。确定高成本负担的领域将使临床干预的关键目标,以帮助实现英国国家净零医疗保健系统战略。本研究的目的是评估手术部位感染的环境和经济成本,并根据感染的严重程度进行分类。方法:本前瞻性观察性研究采用国家卫生服务和个人与社会服务的视角评估了各种下肢血管手术后有无手术部位感染的患者。手术部位感染的严重程度是根据疾病控制和预防中心和基于管理的标准来定义的,轻度手术部位感染的患者需要口服抗生素,中度手术部位感染的患者需要静脉注射抗生素,严重手术部位感染的患者需要进一步的手术干预。结果:共纳入99例患者,其中22例(22.2%)诊断为手术部位感染。无手术部位感染的平均(s.d)环境成本为每位患者10.3(24.3)kgCO2e (95% ci为4.8至15.9)。排放量随着手术部位感染严重程度的增加而增加,轻度产生94.6(53.9)kgCO2e (95% c.i 63.5至125.8,增加918%),中度产生648(407.6)kgCO2e (95% c.i -0.1至1296.6,增加6291%),重度产生2651.4(2217.1)kgCO2e (95% c.i -966.5至6347.2,增加25742%)。无手术部位感染的平均(s.d)财务成本为73.26欧元(160.27欧元)(95% c.i. 36.91至109.72欧元),随着严重程度的增加而增加,轻度成本为392.25欧元(225.69欧元)(95% c.i. 262.16至523.00欧元,增加536%),中度成本为9754.46欧元(5059.77欧元)(95% c.i. 1704.65至17820.68欧元,增加13317%),严重成本为37035.60欧元(32910.84欧元)(95% c.i. -15 376.07至89 447.52欧元,增加50521%)。结论:环境和经济成本与手术部位感染严重程度密切相关,并随严重程度的增加呈指数增长。总的来说,每产生一公斤二氧化碳,手术部位感染的成本为15.58欧元。应探讨环境折扣,并将其纳入可持续性评估,以采用健全的会计方法。手术部位感染应根据严重程度进行评估,而不是作为综合评估的二元结果。
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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来源期刊
BJS Open
BJS Open SURGERY-
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
3.20%
发文量
144
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