医学
防腐剂
沐浴
洗必泰
外科
麻醉
牙科
病理
标识
DOI:10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.1076
摘要
Abstract Background In order to improve outcomes, including reduced surgical infection rate and costs, a revised universal preoperative decolonization protocol was implemented on a trial basis. Methods In a 12 month before and after study at a public teaching hospital in southern California, an alcohol based nasal antiseptic was introduced in place of nasal povidone iodine (PVI) for all surgical patients pre-operatively, paired with chlorhexidine (CHG) bathing which was already in place. All surgical procedures were included, the most common being cholecystectomy, cesarean section and hip fracture. The alcohol nasal antiseptic was selected to replace the PVI nasal antiseptic based on efficacy, staff preference and cost. At the same time, surgical team members began self-application of the alcohol nasal antiseptic each day prior to surgical procedures. This was not mandatory and compliance was not tracked, though informal feedback and observation revealed most surgical team members were applying the nasal antiseptic prior to cases daily. Results In comparison to the 6 month baseline period where there were 27 SSI in 1188 procedures, during the 6 month study period there were 10 SSI in 1253 procedures, representing a 63% reduction (p=.0162) for all types of procedures. We have observed a reduction of 17 SSIs in 2019, compared to the previous year, during the 6 months period. That means a saving of $589,420 during the same period. Conclusion Preoperative universal decolonization with alcohol based nasal antiseptic in place of nasal PVI, paired with CHG bathing, was effective in reducing SSI rate and associated costs. Further study is needed to measure and assess the impact of surgical team member nasal decolonization on patient infection risk and rate. Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures
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