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Appropriateness of surgical antibiotic prophylaxis for breast surgery procedures

Authors :
Jaber, S.
Rogers, C.
Sunderland, B.
Parsons, R.
MacKenzie, S.
Seet, J.
Czarniak, Petra
Jaber, S.
Rogers, C.
Sunderland, B.
Parsons, R.
MacKenzie, S.
Seet, J.
Czarniak, Petra
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

© 2017, Springer International Publishing.Background Guidelines for the appropriate use of antibiotic prophylaxis are provided in the Therapeutic Guidelines: Antibiotics (eTG) in Australia. Inappropriate use of antibiotics is problematic. Objective To examine adherence with therapeutic guidelines (eTG) in breast surgery and trends in non-adherence dependent on the type of breast surgery performed. Setting Major Western Australian teaching hospital. Method A retrospective cross-sectional study reviewed a random sample of 150 from 1049 eligible medical records of patients who underwent a breast surgical procedure in 2013 or 2014. Main outcome measure Adherence to the eTG. Results Antibiotic prophylaxis was prescribed for 139 (92.7%) operations. Adherence to the eTG occurred in 20 (13.3%) operations, whilst 11 (7.3%) did not adhere to any element of the eTG. Appropriate timing was the main factor not adhered to. Postoperative antibiotics were prescribed following 35 (23.3%) operations, with 32 (91.4%) administered beyond 24 h. Length of stay was significantly different (p = 0.0036) between surgical groups. There was a tendency for risk of an infection to be decreased with adherence (odds ratio: 0.23; 95% CI: 0.05, 1.07; p = 0.06). Conclusion Adherence to the eTG was low (13.3%), despite a decreased risk of SSI when guidelines were followed.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1033994929
Document Type :
Electronic Resource