Abstract

BackgroundSurgical site infections (SSI) are one of the most common healthcare associated infections in the low-middle income countries. Data on incidence and risk factors for SSI following surgeries in general and Obstetric and Gynecological surgeries in particular are scare. This study set out to identify risk factors for SSI in patients undergoing Obstetric and Gynecological surgeries in an Indian rural hospital.MethodsPatients who underwent a surgical procedure between September 2010 to February 2013 in the 60-bedded ward of Obstetric and Gynecology department were included. Surveillance for SSI was based on the Centre for Disease Control (CDC) definition and methodology. Incidence and risk factors for SSI, including those for specific procedure, were calculated from data collected on daily ward rounds.ResultsA total of 1173 patients underwent a surgical procedure during the study period. The incidence of SSI in the cohort was 7.84% (95% CI 6.30–9.38). Majority of SSI were superficial. Obstetric surgeries had a lower SSI incidence compared to gynecological surgeries (1.2% versus 10.3% respectively). The risk factors for SSI identified in the multivariate logistic regression model were age (OR 1.03), vaginal examination (OR 1.31); presence of vaginal discharge (OR 4.04); medical disease (OR 5.76); American Society of Anesthesia score greater than 3 (OR 12.8); concurrent surgical procedure (OR 3.26); each increase in hour of surgery, after the first hour, doubled the risk of SSI; inappropriate antibiotic prophylaxis increased the risk of SSI by nearly 5 times. Each day increase in stay in the hospital after the surgery increased the risk of contacting an SSI by 5%.ConclusionsIncidence and risk factors from prospective SSI surveillance can be reported simultaneously for the Obstetric and Gynecological surgeries and can be part of routine practice in resource-constrained settings. The incidence of SSI was lower for Obstetric surgeries compared to Gynecological surgeries. Multiple risk factors identified in the present study can be helpful for SSI risk stratification in low-middle income countries.

Highlights

  • Surgical site infections (SSI) are one of the most common healthcare associated infections in the low-middle income countries

  • Hysterectomy for gynecological causes is reported to have a SSI rate of 1.7% according to the Centre for Disease Control (CDC), United States of America (USA) data [3,4,5]

  • To the best of our knowledge this is the first study in India reporting incidence and risk factors associated with Obstetric and Gynecological surgeries simultaneously

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Summary

Introduction

Surgical site infections (SSI) are one of the most common healthcare associated infections in the low-middle income countries. World Health Organization (WHO) shows that SSIs are most frequently reported type of HAI in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) with a pooled incidence of 11.8 episodes of SSI per 100 surgical procedures [1]. Hysterectomy for gynecological causes is reported to have a SSI rate of 1.7% according to the Centre for Disease Control (CDC), USA data [3,4,5]. SSIs are the second most common complication after urinary tract infections as HAI in cesarean delivery (CD) with reported rates between 3 to 15% in USA [6,7,8] and a cumulative rate of 2.9% in European Centre for Disease Control data from 20 networks in 15 European Union countries [9]. The rates of SSI following CD have varied from 10 to 20% in studies from LMIC’s [1, 10,11,12]

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