Abstract

Abstract Introduction In 2017, a national point prevalence study in Ireland showed low compliance with Surgical Antibiotic Prophylaxis (SAP) duration, with 70% of prescriptions exceeding recommended duration. We hypothesise that there has been little improvement since then and we aim to define our compliance issues more broadly than duration alone. Methods To assess compliance with SAP guidelines at a locally, a multi-site audit was conducted over a 14-day period in July 2022. Data was collected at one major, public hospital and one private hospital, both in the Dublin region. Procedures performed in an operating theatre from all surgical specialties were audited. Results A total of 303 procedures were audited across both sites with 165 public and 138 private included. Overall, compliance with local SAP guidance, according to indication, duration and agent was present in 72 patients (23.7%). Performance in both centres was similar (22% public versus 26% private). Of patients in whom SAP was indicated, all 182 (100%) received it. 91 patients (30%), had no indication for SAP. 19 patients (21.1%) still received SAP despite having no indication. Antibiotic duration surpassed 48 h in 58 (25%) procedures, with 40 (17.5%) receiving antibiotic prophylaxis for more than 6 days. Compliance with appropriate agent recommendation was 43.5%. Conclusion Compliance with SAP guidance is low. Despite contrasting work processes in public versus private settings, compliance with SAP guidelines are similar. Work is currently underway to identify barriers to compliance in order to implement quality improvement initiatives and to address this.

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