As of April 2010 all NHS institutions in the United Kingdom are required to publish data on surgical site infection, but the method for collecting this has not been decided. We examined 7448 trauma and orthopaedic surgical wounds made in patients staying for at least two nights between 2000 and 2008 at our institution and calculated the rate of surgical site infection using three definitions: the US Centers for Disease Control, the United Kingdom Nosocomial Infection National Surveillance Scheme and the ASEPSIS system. On the same series of wounds, the infection rate with outpatient follow-up according to Centre for Disease Control was 15.45%, according to the UK Nosocomial infection surveillance was 11.32%, and according to ASEPSIS was 8.79%. These figures highlight the necessity for all institutions to use the same method for diagnosing surgical site infection. If different methods are used, direct comparisons will be invalid and published rates of infection will be misleading. ©2010 British Editorial Society of Bone and Joint Surgery.
CITATION STYLE
Ashby, E., Haddad, F. S., O’Donnell, E., & Wilson, A. P. R. (2010). How will surgical site infection be measured to ensure “high quality care for all”? Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery - Series B, 92(9), 1294–1299. https://doi.org/10.1302/0301-620X.92B9.22401
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