Decreasing the Incidence of Surgical Wound Infections
- 1 April 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 121 (4), 458-461
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1986.01400040096015
Abstract
• In an attempt to validate the observations of a previously published ten-year study of surgical wounds, we studied 8,474 wounds over an 18-month period using a protocol nearly identical to that of the previous study. Our study corroborated the following predictors of clean-wound infection: increasing duration of surgery, age less than 1 or greater than 50 years, increasing duration of preoperative hospitalization, use of drains, and shaving and emergency surgery. We failed to corroborate use of wound irrigation as a protective measure or time of preoperative shaving as a significant variable. Most importantly, we found a 42% reduction in the clean-wound infection rate during the study period (1.9% to 1.1%), adding support to the concept that a wound surveillance program with surgeon notification is both efficacious and cost-effective. (Arch Surg 1986;121:458-461)Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Surveillance by objective: A new priority-directed approach to the control of nosocomial infections The national foundation for infectious diseases lectureAmerican Journal of Infection Control, 1985
- A Five-Year Prospective Study of 23,649 Surgical WoundsArchives of Surgery, 1973
- Wound infections after preoperative depilatory versus razor preparationThe American Journal of Surgery, 1971