Abstract
Abstract Aims Surgical site infections (SSI) are associated with significant morbidity and mortality, substantial costs for hospitals due to increased length of stays, intensive care admissions and hospital re-admissions. NICE and the WHO support evidence based SSI reduction bundles (SSIRB). An evidence based SSIRB consisting of eight steps was implemented in the Surgical Emergency Unit (SEU) of a large teaching hospital to reduce SSI rates after emergency laparotomies. An audit was undertaken to assess documentation of SSIRB use. Methods The first audit cycle evaluated SEU laparotomies in January 2022 (n=31). The operation notes in patients’ electronic records were reviewed to extract SSIRB use. The intervention involved altering the electronic operation note to include a section on SSIRB use, which occurred in October 2022. The surgical team were educated about the importance of documenting SSIRB use and the updated operation note. A re-audit was completed for April 2023 (n=21). Results The first cycle showed that SSIRB documentation was poor (ranging from 0% to 55% for each step). After the operation note was updated, documentation of SSIRB use improved significantly for five of the eight steps. 48% of operation notes used the SSIRB section and documentation was higher for these laparotomies. Conclusions Documentation of SSIRB use improved after the intervention. Trusts are obliged to report accurate post-operative SSI rates. Improved documentation allows evaluation of SSIRB use compliance, enabling SSIRB steps with low compliance to be targeted. A high compliance rate to a SSIRB will reduce SSI rates, ultimately benefiting both patients and trusts.
Published Version
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