Department of Surgery, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Surgery, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA.
Surgery. 2018 Nov;164(5):921-925. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2018.05.015. Epub 2018 Jul 30.
Recommendations of the Joint Commission discourage the use of surgical skull caps in favor of bouffant or helmet headwear; however, data supporting such recommendations are limited and have been questioned in recent studies, as well as by our departmental and hospital leadership. At the end of December 2015, surgical caps were removed from our institution with the theoretic goal of decreasing surgical site infections. We aimed to assess the impact of this intervention on surgical site infection occurrence at our institution.
Using our institutional American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program General and Vascular procedure-targeted data, we identified patients undergoing any surgical procedure classified as clean or clean-contaminated during a 12-month period before and after implementation of the surgical headwear policy. Patients without complete 30-day follow-up were excluded. Cases with active infection at the time of operation were excluded. Vascular surgery operations were excluded because of the implementation of a separate intervention to decrease surgical site infections during the study period. Patients were grouped according to timing of the operation in relation to the policy change (12 months before or after). Descriptive statistics focused on proportions and adjusted logistic regression models were used to investigate the association of alternative headwear use with any type of surgical site infection. Models were adjusted for potential confounders that included demographics and clinical characteristics (age, sex, race or ethnicity, obesity, diabetes, steroid use, smoking status, cancer, urgency of the operation, and wound classification).
A total of 1,901 patients underwent 1,950 procedures during the study period, with 767 (40%) before and 1,183 (60%) after the headwear policy measure was adopted. The most common procedures overall were colectomy (18%), pancreatectomy (13.5%), and ventral hernia repair (8.9%). The overall rate of any surgical site infection was 5.4%, with no difference before and after policy implementation (5.3% versus 5.5%; P = .81). Multivariate analysis controlling for age, sex, race or ethnicity, obesity, diabetes, smoking status, steroid use, cancer diagnosis, and type of wound classification showed no association between implementation of this new policy and surgical site infections occurrence (odds ratio 1.12 [95% confidence interval 0.73-1.71]; P = .59).
In our institution, the strict implementation of bouffant or helmet headwear, with removal of skull caps from the operating room, was not associated with decreased surgical site infections for clean and clean-contaminated cases. Further evidence is required to assess the validity of this headwear guideline of the Joint Commission and support nationwide implementation of this policy.
联合委员会的建议不鼓励使用手术帽,而倾向于使用头巾或头盔式头罩;然而,支持这些建议的数据有限,并且在最近的研究中受到了质疑,我们部门和医院的领导层也是如此。2015 年 12 月底,我们医院取消了手术帽,理论上是为了减少手术部位感染。我们旨在评估这一干预措施对我院手术部位感染发生率的影响。
使用我们机构的美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进计划通用和血管程序靶向数据,我们确定了在实施手术头饰政策前后 12 个月内接受任何被归类为清洁或清洁污染的手术的患者。没有完整 30 天随访的患者被排除在外。手术时患有活动性感染的病例被排除在外。由于在研究期间实施了单独的干预措施来减少手术部位感染,因此排除了血管外科手术。患者根据手术时间与政策变化的关系分组(政策变化前 12 个月或后 12 个月)。描述性统计集中在比例上,并使用调整后的逻辑回归模型来调查替代头饰使用与任何类型的手术部位感染之间的关联。模型根据潜在混杂因素进行了调整,包括人口统计学和临床特征(年龄、性别、种族或民族、肥胖、糖尿病、类固醇使用、吸烟状况、癌症、手术紧迫性和伤口分类)。
共有 1901 名患者接受了 1950 例手术,其中 767 例(40%)在头饰政策实施前,1183 例(60%)在头饰政策实施后。总体上最常见的手术是结肠切除术(18%)、胰腺切除术(13.5%)和腹侧疝修补术(8.9%)。所有手术部位感染的总体发生率为 5.4%,政策实施前后无差异(5.3%与 5.5%;P=0.81)。在控制年龄、性别、种族或民族、肥胖、糖尿病、吸烟状况、类固醇使用、癌症诊断和伤口分类类型的多变量分析中,实施这项新政策与手术部位感染的发生之间没有关联(比值比 1.12[95%置信区间 0.73-1.71];P=0.59)。
在我们的机构中,严格执行头巾或头盔式头罩,手术室去除手术帽,与清洁和清洁污染病例的手术部位感染减少无关。需要进一步的证据来评估联合委员会这项头饰指南的有效性,并支持在全国范围内实施这项政策。