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手術部位感染の原因として知られる危険因子対策として、Kimberly Clark では次のような目的のソリューションを提供いたします:

• 患者の中核体温の維持
• 外科手術における皮膚細菌叢に起因する手術部位汚染の削減
• 人から人への病原体の伝播を防ぎ、
• 手術部位を汚染から保護するためのバリアの提供
• 手術前に準備される手術器具の無菌性の維持 詳細については、以下のリンクをクリックしてください:



手術部位感染 (SSI) は侵襲的治療中に発生した場合、治療の追加および延長が必要となる可能性があります。 安全な手術環境を維持すべく、医療施設が最善の努力を尽くしているにも関わらず、手術部位感染に対する処置費用は米国だけで毎年 100 億ドルにものぼります。

  • 米国で年間に実施される 3000 万件の外科手術のうち 780,000 件で SSI を引き起こしています。1
  • 英国では、手術部位感染を受けた患者1人あたりの推定直接経費は2,265ユーロから2,518ユーロ となっています。2
  • オランダでの研究によると、SSI が原因で入院日数が 5.8 ~ 17 日延長されるとのことです。3
  • フランスでは、手術を受けた患者の約 11% で手術部位感染が発生しています。4

典型的な SSI の要因例:

  • 手術による低体温に起因する合併症
  • 皮膚細菌叢による切開領域の汚染
  • 細菌交差汚染
  • 手術器具の汚染

1 Cook, R. "Hospitals learn simple, cheap steps can prevent infections,"San Francisco Chronicle、2004年5月18日; F1.
2 Coello R, Glenister H, Fereres J, Bartlett C, Leigh D, Sedgwick J, et al. The cost of infection in surgical patients: a case-control study. J Hosp Infect 1993; 24(4):239-50., and Plowman R, Graves N, Griffin MA, Roberts JA, Swan AV, Cookson, B, et al. The rate and cost of hospital-acquired infections occurring in patients admitted to selected specialties of a district general hospital in England and the national burden imposed. J Hosp Infect 2001; 47(3):198-209.
3 Geubbels EL, Mintjes-de Groot AJ, Van den Berg JM, de Boer AS. An operating surveillance system of surgical site infections in the Netherlands: results of the PREZIES national surveillance network. Preventie van Ziekenhuisinfecties door Surveillance. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2000; 21 (5): 107.
4 出典:Prevalence of nosocomial infections in France; results of the nationwide survey in 1996. Journal of Hospital Infection. 2000; 46:186-193


臨床教育 (CE および CME)

臨床教育についてさらに読む...

リソース & ツール
  • The Clinical Issue 第1号:Pressure Ulcers in the Surgical Patient (手術患者の床擦れ)
  • CDC 手指衛生ガイドライン
  • SSI 費用の感染削減効果計算ツール
  • 手術部位感染予防に関する患者様のリスクファクターとベストプラクティス
  • Prevent Surgical Site Infections. (手術部位感染を防ぐ)
  • Pressure Ulcers In The Surgical Patient. (手術患者の床擦れ)
  • Cleaning Reusable Medical Devices: A Critical First Step (再使用可能な医療機器の洗浄:重要な最初のステップ)

    リソース & ツールについてさらに読む...

    リサーチ & レポート
  • Postoperative Hyperglycemia and Surgical Site Infection in General Surgery Patients (Archives of Surgery)
         

    Postoperative high blood sugar levels may increase the risk for infection at the surgical site in patients having general surgery. The study examined 1,561 patients, including 559 who had vascular surgery, 226 who had colorectal surgery and 776 who had a type of general surgery other than colorectal. Age, emergency status, physical status as classified by the American Society of Anesthesiologists, time in surgery, diabetes and high postoperative blood glucose were all factors that appeared to be associated with surgical site infections, but factors other than postoperative blood glucose level were not significant predictors of infection. "In conclusion, we found postoperative hyperglycemia to be the most important risk factor for surgical site infection in general and colorectal cancer surgery patients, and serum glucose levels higher than 110 milligrams per deciliter were associated with increasingly higher rates of post-surgical infection," the researchers wrote.

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  • Effect of an Implantable Gentamicin-Collagen Sponge on Sternal Wound Infections Following Cardiac Surgery (JAMA)
         

    Duke University Medical Center researchers said they found that surgically implanted antibiotic-infused sponges do not reduce the rate of sternal wound infections in patients who have had heart surgery. Gentamicin-collagen sponges, approved in 54 countries, not including the U.S., are used in more than 1 million people. The study of 1,502 heart surgery patients found there was no significant difference in the overall rates of sternal wound infections between people who received sponges and those who did not.

    Read More
  • Institutional Prescreening for Detection and Eradication of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus in Patients Undergoing Elective Orthopaedic Surgery (The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery)
         

    A study examined 7,000 patients undergoing elective, inpatient orthopedic procedures at New England Baptist Hospital in Boston who were screened for methicillin-sensitive Staphlylococcus aureus and MRSA. Patients who tested positive were instructed via pre-op phone calls to apply mupiricin ointment to the interior of each naris, and patients who still carried MRSA after the application of the ointment were treated with standard MRSA isolation precautions in addition to pre-op antibiotics. The study showed that the surgical site infection rate dropped 59 percent when the prescreening program was in place. The researchers suggested the drop in SSIs was likely due to the ability of clinicians to switch preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis to vancomycin, as well as the treatments with the ointment. The researchers concluded that prescreening programs are "feasible and can lead to significant reductions in postoperative rates of surgical site infection."

    Read More
  • Lessons from the Pioneers Reporting Healthcare-Associated Infections (National Conference of State Legislatures)
         

    The National Conference of State Legislatures has released a new report that offers lessons on infection-reporting data from nine of the states that first required medical facilities to report health care-associated infections. The NCSL looked at state laws passed from 2005 to 2009 and interviewed state lawmakers, health care providers and other related groups in Alabama, Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Washington. Since 2005, the number of states that require health care facilities to report HAIs has jumped from six to 27.

    Download PDF
  • Gentamicin–Collagen Sponge for Infection Prophylaxis in Colorectal Surgery (New England Journal of Medicine)
         

    Leaving an antibiotic-soaked collagen sponge in the wound after colorectal surgery "paradoxically" seemed to cause an increase in surgical site infections. The findings of Elliott Bennett-Guerrero of Duke Clinical Research Institute in Durham, N.C., and colleagues opposed findings of an earlier study that identified a 70 percent decrease in such infections with the use of a gentamicin-collagen sponge. The study involved 602 patients undergoing open or laparoscopically assisted colorectal surgery at 39 U.S. sites.

    Read More
  • Anesthetic Management and Surgical Site Infections in Total Hip or Knee Replacement: A Population-based Study (Anesthesiology)
         

    Epidrual or spinal anesthesia may help curb the risk of surgical site infection when compared with the use of general anesthesia in patients undergoing total joint replacement surgery. In an editorial on the study, Daniel I. Sessler of the Cleveland Clinic Anesthesiology Institute’s Department of Outcomes Research, said the findings provide compelling epidemiologic evidence that neuraxial anesthesia reduces the risk of SSIs. The study examined 3,081 patients in Taiwan who underwent total knee and total hip replacement procedures, and it showed that SSI rates within 30 days of the procedure was 2.2 times greater in patients who had general anesthesia.

    Read More
  • Variation in the Type and Frequency of Postoperative Invasive Staphylococcus aureus Infections According to Type of Surgical Procedure (Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology)
         

    Patients who have had major chest or head operations are at an increased risk of developing post-surgical staphylococcus aureus infections. The findings are based on a review of 81,267 patients who underwent 96,455 orthopedic, cardiothoracic, plastic surgery or neurosurgery procedures at nine locations between 2003 and 2006. There were 454 staph infections among the patients, with the highest rates of bloodstream infections occurring in patients who had chest surgery, while the highest rates of surgical site infections occurred in patients who had brain operations. Deverick Anderson, lead author from Duke University Medical Center, said additional preventions for cardiovascular or neurosurgical procedures may be needed.

    Read More
  • Variation in the Type and Frequency of Postoperative Invasive Staphylococcus aureus Infections According to Type of Surgical Procedure (Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology)
         

    Patients might have a higher risk of developing invasive Staphylococcus aureus infections after cardiothoracic and neurosurgical procedures when compared with orthopedic or plastic surgical procedures, according to a study published in Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology. Lead author Deverick Anderson and his team of researchers from Duke University Medical Center studied the postsurgical outcomes of 96,455 procedures from 11 hospitals. Included in the analysis were individuals who had undergone orthopedic, neurosurgical, cardiothoracic and plastic surgical procedures between 2003 and 2006. The breakdown of MRSA infections ranged from 62 percent following cardiothoracic surgery to 35 percent following plastic surgery, the investigators found.

    Read More

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