Francis Ross H, Mudery Jordan A, Tran Phi, Howe Carol, Jacob Abraham
Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, The University of Arizona College of Medicine , Tucson, AZ , USA.
Arizona Health Sciences Library, The University of Arizona College of Medicine , Tucson, AZ , USA.
Front Surg. 2016 Mar 29;3:20. doi: 10.3389/fsurg.2016.00020. eCollection 2016.
Hospital systems and regulating agencies enforce strict guidelines barring personal items from entering the operating room (OR) - touting surgical site infections (SSIs) and patient safety as the rationale. We sought to determine whether or not evidence supporting this recommendation exists by reviewing available literature.
Rules and guidelines that are not evidence based may lead to increased hospital expenses and limitations on healthcare provider autonomy.
PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, and CINAHL were searched in order to find articles that correlated personal items in the OR to documented SSIs. Articles that satisfied the following criteria were included: (1) studies looking at personal items in the OR, such as handbags, purses, badges, pagers, backpacks, jewelry phones, and eyeglasses, but not just OR equipment; and (2) the primary outcome measure was infection at the surgical site.
Seventeen articles met inclusion criteria and were evaluated. Of the 17, the majority did not determine if personal items increased risk for SSIs. Only one article examined the correlation between a personal item near the operative site and SSI, concluding that wedding rings worn in the OR had no impact on SSIs. Most studies examined colonization rates on personal items as potential infection risk; however, no personal items were causally linked to SSI in any of these studies.
There is no objective evidence to suggest that personal items in the OR increase risk for SSIs.
医院系统和监管机构执行严格的指导方针,禁止个人物品进入手术室(OR),理由是宣扬手术部位感染(SSI)和患者安全。我们试图通过回顾现有文献来确定是否存在支持这一建议的证据。
缺乏循证依据的规则和指导方针可能会导致医院费用增加以及医疗服务提供者自主权受限。
检索了PubMed、Embase、Scopus、Cochrane图书馆、科学网和护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL),以查找将手术室中的个人物品与已记录的手术部位感染相关联的文章。纳入符合以下标准的文章:(1)研究手术室中的个人物品,如手提包、钱包、徽章、传呼机、背包、珠宝、手机和眼镜,但不包括手术室设备;(2)主要结局指标是手术部位感染。
17篇文章符合纳入标准并进行了评估。在这17篇文章中,大多数没有确定个人物品是否会增加手术部位感染的风险。只有一篇文章研究了手术部位附近的个人物品与手术部位感染之间的相关性,得出的结论是手术室中佩戴的结婚戒指对手术部位感染没有影响。大多数研究检查了个人物品上的定植率作为潜在感染风险;然而,在这些研究中,没有任何个人物品与手术部位感染存在因果关系。
没有客观证据表明手术室中的个人物品会增加手术部位感染的风险。