Surgical Site Infection Prevention
Thousands of patients undergo surgery each year. Prevention of infection from the
surgery is of great importance. It is estimated that infections of the surgical
site (incision) are responsible for 14 to 16 percent of all reported hospital
infections. If a patient gets a surgical site infection, they are 60 percent more
likely to spend time in an intensive care unit, five times more likely to be readmitted
and twice as likely to die. Reducing a patient's chance of a surgical site infection is
an important goal of the surgical team.
Not all types of surgery require an antibiotic before the surgical
cut (incision), but certain types of surgeries may have a higher risk for the
development of an infection after surgery. The chance for a surgical site infection
in these types of surgery can be reduced by giving an antibiotic in a certain time
frame before the surgical cut. Ideally for most of the antibiotics, the best time
to give the antibiotic is 0-60 minutes prior to the surgical cut.
Antibiotic Timing Before Surgical Incision
- Antibiotics are medicines to prevent and treat infections. Research
shows that surgery patients who get antibiotics within the hour before
their operation are less likely to get wound infections. Getting an
antibiotic earlier, or after surgery begins, is not as effective.
- This chart represents the percentage of patients who received an
antibiotic within 0-60 minutes before the surgical incision.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS):
Hospitals in the top 10 percent in the nation achieve this 94 percent of
the time.
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Surgical Site Infection Prevention
Antibiotic Timing Before Surgical Incision
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