Birgand Gabriel, Saliou Philippe, Lucet Jean-Christophe
1French Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM),Infection,Antimicrobials,Modelling,Evolution (IAME),UMR 1137,F-75018 Paris,France.
4Brest Teaching Hospital,Infection Control Unit,Brest,France.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2015 Jan;36(1):93-106. doi: 10.1017/ice.2014.9.
SUMMARY A systematic literature review was performed to assess the impact of surgical-staff behaviors on the risk of surgical site infections. Published data are limited, heterogeneous, and weakened by several methodological flaws, underlying the need for more studies with accurate tools. OBJECTIVE To assess the current literature regarding the impact of surgical-staff behaviors on the risk of surgical-site infection (SSI). DESIGN Systematic literature review. METHODS We searched the Medline, EMBASE, Ovid, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases for original articles about the impact of intraoperative behaviors on the risk of SSI published in English before September 2013. RESULTS We retrieved 27 original articles reporting data on number of people in the operating room (n=14), door openings (n=14; number [n=6], frequency [n=7], reasons [n=4], or duration [n=3]), surgical-team discipline (evidence of distraction; n=4), compliance with traffic measures (n=6), or simulated behaviors (n=3). Most (59%) articles were published in 2009-2013. End points were the 30-day SSI rate (n=8), air-particle count (n=2), or microbiological air counts (n=6); 11 studies were only descriptive. Number of people in the operating room and SSI rate or airborne contaminants (particle/bacteria) were correlated in 2 studies. Door openings and airborne bacteria counts were correlated in 2 observational studies and 1 experimental study. Two cohort studies showed a significant association between surgeon interruptions/distraction or noise and SSI rate. The level of evidence was low in all studies. CONCLUSIONS Published data about the impact of operating-room behaviors on the risk of infection are limited and heterogeneous. All studies exhibit major methodological flaws. More studies with accurate tools should be performed to address the influence of operating room behaviors on the infectious risk.
进行了一项系统的文献综述,以评估手术人员行为对外科手术部位感染风险的影响。已发表的数据有限、参差不齐,且存在若干方法学缺陷,这突出表明需要采用更精确的工具进行更多研究。
评估当前关于手术人员行为对外科手术部位感染(SSI)风险影响的文献。
系统文献综述。
我们检索了Medline、EMBASE、Ovid、科学网和Cochrane数据库,以查找2013年9月之前以英文发表的关于术中行为对SSI风险影响的原创文章。
我们检索到27篇原创文章,这些文章报告了关于手术室人数(n = 14)、门开启情况(n = 14;次数[n = 6]、频率[n = 7]、原因[n = 4]或持续时间[n = 3])、手术团队纪律(分心证据;n = 4)、交通措施遵守情况(n = 6)或模拟行为(n = 3)的数据。大多数(59%)文章发表于2009 - 2013年。终点指标为30天SSI发生率(n = 8)、空气微粒计数(n = 2)或微生物空气计数(n = 6);11项研究仅为描述性研究。两项研究表明手术室人数与SSI发生率或空气传播污染物(微粒/细菌)之间存在相关性。两项观察性研究和一项实验性研究表明门开启情况与空气传播细菌计数之间存在相关性。两项队列研究表明外科医生受到干扰/分心或噪音与SSI发生率之间存在显著关联。所有研究的证据水平都很低。
关于手术室行为对感染风险影响的已发表数据有限且参差不齐。所有研究均存在重大方法学缺陷。应采用更精确的工具进行更多研究,以探讨手术室行为对感染风险的影响。