Abstract
Purpose To study the effect on infection factors and nursing care of postoperative incision in gynecological cancer patients. Method 72 patients with gynecological malignant tumors who came to the hospital from January 2019 to December 2019 were selected as the research objects. They were divided into the study group and control group by cluster random sampling. The control group was given routine nursing mode, including matters needing attention in surgery, health education, prevention of complications, and dietary guidance. The study group implemented the high-quality nursing mode on the basis of the control group. Postoperative situation, incision infection rate, and quality of life were observed and compared between the two groups. Results The control group's time to get out of bed, postoperative eating time, postoperative exhaust time, and hospital stay were longer than those of the study group. The comparison of the postoperative related conditions of the two groups showed that P < 0.05, which indicated that the difference was statistically significant. The postoperative incision infection rate in the study group was 2.78%, and in the control group, the postoperative incision infection rate was 19.44%; the postoperative incision infection rate in the study group was significantly lower than that in the control group. The difference was statistically significant, P < 0.05. The factors affecting the quality of life of patients in the study group were lower than that of the control group, and the difference was statistically significant, P < 0.05. Time to get out of bed, postoperative eating time, postoperative exhaust time, hospital stay, and quality of life were the main influencing factors of postoperative incision infection in gynecological tumors. Conclusion Time to get out of bed, postoperative eating time, postoperative exhaust time, hospital stay, and quality of life were the main influencing factors of postoperative incision infection in gynecological tumors. High-quality nursing intervention had better clinical nursing effect in preventing postoperative incision infection. It should be widely used in clinical nursing.
Highlights
Among gynecological malignant tumors, ovarian malignant tumors and cervical and uterine malignant tumors are the most common [1]
The surgical excision is wide, and the incision is large, once postoperative incision infection occurs in gynecological tumor patients, it will affect the treatment effect and increase the burden of treatment
The factors affecting the quality of life of patients in the study group were lower than that of the control group, and the difference was statistically significant, P < 0:05
Summary
Ovarian malignant tumors and cervical and uterine malignant tumors are the most common [1]. The surgical excision is wide, and the incision is large, once postoperative incision infection occurs in gynecological tumor patients, it will affect the treatment effect and increase the burden of treatment. Incision infection is a common postoperative complication [2, 3]; in severe cases, it can even directly lead to failure of the operation [4, 5]. The influencing factors of postoperative incision infection in gynecological tumor patients were analyzed, and targeted high-quality nursing intervention programs were developed. Giving targeted nursing intervention before, during, and after surgery can effectively prevent and reduce surgical infection. 72 patients with gynecological tumors treated by surgery in our hospital from January 2019 to December 2019 were analyzed.
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