Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD; Department of Surgery, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD.
J Am Coll Surg. 2018 Aug;227(2):189-197.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.031. Epub 2018 May 18.
Surgical site infections (SSIs) after colorectal surgery are common, lead to patient harm, and are costly to the healthcare system. This study's purpose was to evaluate the effectiveness of the AHRQ Safety Program for Surgery in Hawaii.
This pre-post cohort study involved 100% of 15 hospitals in Hawaii from January 2013 through June 2015. The intervention was a statewide implementation of the Comprehensive Unit-Based Safety Program and individualized bundles of interventions to reduce SSIs. Primary end point was colorectal SSIs. Secondary end point was safety culture measured by the AHRQ Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture.
The most common interventions implemented were reliable chlorhexidine wash, wipe before operation, and surgical preparation; appropriate antibiotic choice, dose, and timing; standardized post-surgical debriefing; and differentiating clean-dirty-clean with anastomosis tray and closing tray. From January 2013 (quarter 1) through June 2015 (quarter 2), the collaborative colorectal SSI rate decreased (from 12.08% to 4.63%; p < 0.01). The SSI rate exhibited a linear decrease during the 10-quarter period (p = 0.005). Safety culture increased in 10 of 12 domains: Overall Perception/Patient Safety (from 49% to 53%); Teamwork Across Units (from 49% to 54%); Management-Support Patient Safety (from 53% to 60%); Nonpunitive Response to Error (from 36% to 40%); Communication Openness (from 50% to 55%); Frequency of Events Reported (from 51% to 60%); Feedback/Communication about Error (from 52% to 59%); Organizational Learning/Continuous Improvement (from 59% to 70%); Supervisor/Manager Expectations and Actions Promoting Safety (from 58% to 64%); and Teamwork Within Units (from 68% to 75%) (all p < 0.05).
Participation in the national AHRQ Safety Program for Surgery in the state of Hawaii was associated with a 61.7% decrease in colorectal SSI rate and an increase in patient safety culture.
结直肠手术后的手术部位感染(SSI)很常见,会对患者造成伤害,并且给医疗保健系统带来很高的成本。本研究的目的是评估夏威夷 AHRQ 手术安全计划的有效性。
这项前瞻性队列研究涉及 2013 年 1 月至 2015 年 6 月期间夏威夷的 100%的 15 家医院。干预措施是全州范围内实施综合单位基础安全计划和针对降低 SSI 的个体化干预包。主要终点是结直肠 SSI。次要终点是通过 AHRQ 医院患者安全文化调查测量的安全文化。
实施的最常见干预措施包括可靠的氯己定清洗、手术前擦拭、手术准备;选择合适的抗生素、剂量和时机;标准化术后汇报;以及通过吻合器托盘和闭合托盘区分清洁-污染-清洁。从 2013 年 1 月(第 1 季度)到 2015 年 6 月(第 2 季度),合作结直肠 SSI 率下降(从 12.08%降至 4.63%;p<0.01)。在 10 个季度期间,SSI 率呈线性下降(p=0.005)。安全文化在 12 个领域中的 10 个领域中增加:整体感知/患者安全(从 49%增加到 53%);跨单位团队合作(从 49%增加到 54%);管理层支持患者安全(从 53%增加到 60%);非惩罚性应对错误(从 36%增加到 40%);沟通开放性(从 50%增加到 55%);事件报告频率(从 51%增加到 60%);关于错误的反馈/沟通(从 52%增加到 59%);组织学习/持续改进(从 59%增加到 70%);主管/经理期望和促进安全的行动(从 58%增加到 64%);以及单位内团队合作(从 68%增加到 75%)(均 p<0.05)。
参与夏威夷的国家 AHRQ 手术安全计划与结直肠 SSI 率降低 61.7%和患者安全文化提高有关。