Birhanu Azaria, Amare Hiwot Hailu, G/Mariam Mintesinot, Girma Timsel, Tadesse Muhiddin, Assefa Dawit Getachew
Adare General Hospital, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
School of Public Health, Dilla University, Dilla, Ethiopia.
Ann Med Surg (Lond). 2022 Aug 28;83:104324. doi: 10.1016/j.amsu.2022.104324. eCollection 2022 Nov.
Surgical site infections (SSIs) are infections that occur within 30 days of surgery or within 1 year in patients with implants at or around the surgical site. They are among the dangerous complications of surgical procedures that expose patients to higher costs and increase the risk of death because of severe morbidity and associated longer hospital stays. This study aimed to determine the extent and determinants of surgical site infections in surgically treated cases during the study period.
A hospital-based cross-sectional study was conducted among surgically treated patients at Dilla University Referral Hospital in the surgical department. The calculated sample size was 408, calculated using the single population proportion formula, and the required information was collected from the medical records of the study participants using checklists. Bivariate logistic regression was performed to identify candidate variables, and all candidate variables with a P-value < of 0.25 were included in multivariable logistic regression. Variables with a P-value < 0.05 were considered statically significant, and the strength of association was measured by odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
As our finding showed magnitude of surgical site infections was 19.3%. The factors which had significant association with surgical wound infections were blood transfusion (AOR = 0.16 (0.04-0.73), hemoglobin level < 7 g/dl (AOR = 10.40 (3.39-32.49), shock (AOR = 19.09 (4.69-77.51), previous surgery (AOR = 11.53(3.73-35.61), hospitalization 7-14 days (AOR = 5.51(1.52-19.91) and hospitalization >14 days (AOR = 8.18(1.84-36.75).
The percentage of surgical site infections was high. Shock, low haemoglobin level, blood transfusion, previous surgery, and longer length of hospital stay were significantly related to surgical site infections.
手术部位感染(SSIs)是指在手术后30天内或手术部位及周围植入物的患者在1年内发生的感染。它们是手术过程中的危险并发症之一,会使患者面临更高的费用,并因严重的发病率和更长的住院时间而增加死亡风险。本研究旨在确定研究期间手术治疗病例中手术部位感染的程度和决定因素。
在迪拉大学转诊医院外科对手术治疗的患者进行了一项基于医院的横断面研究。使用单总体比例公式计算出的样本量为408,并使用清单从研究参与者的病历中收集所需信息。进行双变量逻辑回归以识别候选变量,所有P值<0.25的候选变量都纳入多变量逻辑回归。P值<0.05的变量被认为具有统计学意义,关联强度用比值比(OR)和95%置信区间(CIs)衡量。
我们的研究结果显示手术部位感染的发生率为19.3%。与手术伤口感染有显著关联的因素包括输血(调整后比值比[AOR]=0.16[0.04 - 0.73])、血红蛋白水平<7 g/dl(AOR = 10.40[3.39 - 32.49])、休克(AOR = 19.09[4.69 - 77.51])、既往手术(AOR = 11.53[3.73 - 35.61])、住院7 - 14天(AOR = 5.51[1.52 - 19.91])和住院>14天(AOR = 8.18[1.84 - 36.75])。
手术部位感染的百分比很高。休克、低血红蛋白水平、输血、既往手术和较长的住院时间与手术部位感染显著相关。