Neurosurgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
Surveillance of Surgical Site Infections and Non-surgical Infections of Neurosurgical Patient. Retrospective Before-after Cohort Study at a Tertiary Care Hospital in Poland
Continuous surveillance in 2003-2017 allowed to detect HAIs in patients staying in a 42-bed neurosurgery unit with 6 intensive neurosurgical supervision beds. 10,332 surgical patients were qualified for the study. The study was carried out in the framework of a national surveillance of HAI programme following methodology recommended by Healthcare-Associated Infections Surveillance Network (HAI-Net), European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Intervention in this before-after study (2003-2017) comprised standardised surveillance of HAI with regular analysis and feedback.
Supervision of HAIs was carried out in the neurosurgery unit in 2003-2017 in St. Luke
Provincial Hospital in Tarnów, Poland. The department offers 42 hospital beds (including 6
intensive supervision beds, where mechanical ventilation is also used). Patients in very poor
clinical condition do not stay in this department as they are generally sent to a separate
general intensive care unit. Active surveillance of infections was implemented in the
hospital in 2001 and the experiences concerning the neurosurgery unit were already the
subject of previous general analyses not including trend analysis or detailed analyses of
various HAI clinical forms [WaĆaszek NCH 2015]. The Infection Control Team consists of a
doctor, who is employed on a 1/3 full-time equivalent basis and 4 full-time epidemiological
nurses.
The data analysed involve the time when the unit in question began targeted, active
surveillance of infections, initially: 2003-2012, using tools (definitions, protocols) in
accordance with the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) [Emori, NNIS], then from 2012,
HAI recognition methodology and HAI record-keeping has followed the Surveillance Network
(HAI-Net), European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) [ECDC 4.3, 2012; HAI-Net
ICU 1.02. ECDC; 2015]. For the purposes of this analysis, HAI cases originally qualified in
2002-2012 according to the NHSN criteria were retrospectively subjected to reclassification
according to the ECDC definitions from 2012 (they concerned BSI, PN and UTI), hence, all HAI
cases were qualified into individual HAI categories according to the ECDC case definition
keeping the division into: catheter-related BSI and BSI secondary to another infection, five
subcategories of PN and three forms of SSI. The surgeries performed were stratified by type
of operation conforming to the International Classification of Procedures in Medicine ICD
9-CM, according to the NHSN code (International Classification of Diseases) (Supplementarty
Material, Table 1).
Beginning in 2003, changes were being implemented as regards supervision of infections by the
Infection Control Team together with the staff of the departments (neurosurgery, operating
block and infection control team), which encompassed, among others:
1. hospital admission rules for shortening of the pre-operative stay and optimal patient
preparation for surgery to limit emergency surgery; preparation of the surgical team
2. work organization of the operating block: among others, preoperative checklist, surgical
hand hygiene, preparation of the operating field and surgical drape, application of
antiseptic to the edges of the wound before sewing it;
3. perioperative procedure: patient preparation for surgery, among others, bathing the
patient immediately prior to surgery, hair removal, changing the bed linen and patient's
clothing immediately before surgery, patient care during the postoperative period, and
above all, the 5 moments for hand hygiene and post-operative dressing and wound control.
In addition: regular analysis and feedback have also been implemented.
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