Surgical site infections (SSI) are the most frequent type of infection acquired during healthcare delivery in developing countries. Infections are also the most frequent complication following surgery to occur across Africa. Preventing SSIs is complex, since the problem results from a number of factors affecting the patient’s entire surgical journey, including after hospital discharge. However, as with other HAIs, SSIs are largely avoidable.
To make progress in reducing SSIs, surgical and infection prevention and control teams in five hospitals in Kenya, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe implemented the Surgical Unit-based Safety Program (SUSP) from July 2013 to December 2015. Supported by WHO and the Johns Hopkins Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality, these teams implemented a multi-modal intervention consisting of implementing or strengthening multiple SSI prevention measures combined with an adaptive approach (the Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program) aimed at facilitating the adoption of these measures and the promotion of a wider patient safety culture.
The prevention measures identified by local teams according to risk assessment were:
preoperative patient bathing;
avoiding hair removal or performing this with clippers as opposed to shaving;
appropriate surgical hand preparation;
appropriate patient skin preparation;
optimal antibiotic prophylaxis; and
improving discipline in the operating room.
Implementation of this strategy, including SSI surveillance, proved to be feasible in these settings with limited resources, apart from one hospital where the program was discontinued for specific reasons. Most importantly, the strategy was very successful at improving preventive measures and reducing the risk of SSI. The SUSP results are available in this Lancet Infectious Diseases article.
The success of SUSP in improving clinical practice and outcomes is mainly attributable to the strong ownership of the program by local teams, with high motivation of staff in these institutions involved, keen to improve their practices, and the influential role of project leaders across the facility.
The article is dedicated to the memory of Dr. Peter Ongom (SUSP lead at Mulago Hospital, Uganda, until July 2014) who died during the study.
SUSP was funded by the United States Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the WHO Service Delivery and Safety Department.
Source: WHO
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