Surveillance of surgical site infection in a teaching hospital in Ghana: a prospective cohort study
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Journal of Hospital Infection
Abstract
Background: Surveillance systems for surgical site infections (SSIs), as a measure of
patient safety, help health institutions devise strategies to reduce or prevent them. No
surveillance systems exist to monitor SSIs in Ghana.
Aim: To establish a system for monitoring trends and detecting outbreaks in order to
create awareness of and control SSIs.
Methods: An active 30-day surveillance was undertaken at the general surgical unit of the
Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, from July 1st, 2017 to December 31st, 2018 to identify SSI. It
involved a daily inpatient surveillance of patients who had had a surgical procedure,
followed by post-discharge surveillance by means of a healthcare personnel-based survey
and a patient-based telephone survey. We supplied quarterly feedback of results to
surgeons.
Findings: Among the 3267 patients included, 331 were identified with an SSI, a 10%
incidence risk. Patients who acquired an SSI experienced increased morbidity including
nine extra days in hospital and an adjusted relative mortality risk of 2.3 (95% confidence
interval: 1.3 - 4.1; P¼0.006) compared to patients without SSI. Forty-nine per cent (161/
331) of SSIs were diagnosed post discharge using the healthcare personnel-based survey.
The patient-based telephone survey contributed 12 additional cases. SSI incidence risk
decreased from 12.8% to 7.5% during the study period.
Conclusion: Post-discharge surveillance is feasible using existing healthcare personnel,
and the results highlight the high risk and burden of SSIs in Ghana. A surveillance system
Description
Research Article