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A Multi-model Intervention Including an Occlusive Dressing and Parental Engagement to Prevent Pediatric Surgical Site Infections for Elective Ambulatory Procedures in a Resource-constrained Setting: an Observational Retrospective Study from A...

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Date 2018 Jul 4
PMID 29968096
Citations 2
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Abstract

Purpose: In resource-limited settings, up to two-thirds of surgical patients develop surgical site infections (SSIs). Our aim was to implement a multimodal protocol including an occlusive dressing and parental engagement to achieve low SSI rates in patients undergoing elective ambulatory pediatric surgery at a tertiary center in Haiti.

Methods: An observational retrospective review of pediatric patients who underwent elective ambulatory procedures from August 2015 to May 2016 following the implementation of a multimodal protocol consisting of: washing and prepping the operative site with chlorhexidine; review of the surgical safety checklist; one dose of cefazolin before incision; after wound closure application of steri strips, gauze, and tegaderm; and with parental engagement maintenance of the dressing until the follow-up visit.

Results: We performed 119 procedures in 99 patients. Mean age was 6.2 years. The most common procedure was inguinal hernia repair (66%); 89% of parents returned to clinic with their children for the follow-up visit, which occurred on average on day 7.6 (range 3-40 days). The SSI rate was 1% (CI 0.00-0.03).

Conclusion: Implementing a multimodal protocol including an occlusive dressing and parental engagement led to a 1% SSI rate in a resource-constrained setting.

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PMID: 36644327 PMC: 9830599. DOI: 10.1186/s43159-022-00237-5.


Prevention of Surgical Site Infections in Neonates and Children: Non-Pharmacological Measures of Prevention.

Meoli A, Ciavola L, Rahman S, Masetti M, Toschetti T, Morini R Antibiotics (Basel). 2022; 11(7).

PMID: 35884117 PMC: 9311619. DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11070863.

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