1. Evaluation of antibiotic prophylaxis for gastrointestinal surgeries in a teaching hospital: An interventional pre–post study
- Author
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Maryam Mousavi, Sepideh Elyasi, Amirhossein Bahreyni, Seyed Sattar Samani, Ahmad Atamanesh, Abbas Abdollahi, and Asiyeh Fattahi Masum
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Antibiotics ,Teaching hospital ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gastrointestinal surgeries ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Surgical Wound Infection ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Antibiotic use ,Antibiotic prophylaxis ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Digestive System Surgical Procedures ,0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Guideline ,Antibiotic Prophylaxis ,Antimicrobial ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Medical–Surgical Nursing ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Guideline implementation ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
Surgical site infections are related to a high morbidity, mortality and healthcare costs. Despite ample evidence demonstrating the effectiveness of antimicrobials to prevent surgical site infections, inappropriate timing, antibiotic selection and excessive continuation of antibiotics are common in practice. In this study, we compare the appropriateness of antibiotic prophylaxis in gastrointestinal surgery, before and after an evidence-based guideline implementation. One hundred patients were evaluated in each group. The implementation of the guideline resulted in significant reduction of incorrect use of antibiotics from 55% to 18% (P = 0.002). It also reduced duration of prophylactic antibiotics (43% vs. 23%, P = 0.025). Inappropriate doses diminished but not significantly (8% vs. 5%, P = 0.321). Based on our results, in more than half of of these cases patients received incorrect antibiotic prophylaxis regimens for gastrointestinal surgery in this hospital. Local guideline implementation can result in reduction of antibiotic use, dose and duration errors.
- Published
- 2019