Orthopaedic surgical site infection surveillance in NHS England

Author:

Tissingh E. K.1,Sudlow A.1,Jones A.1,Nolan J. F.1

Affiliation:

1. Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, Colney Lane, Norwich, NR4 7UY, UK.

Abstract

Aims The importance of accurate identification and reporting of surgical site infection (SSI) is well recognised but poorly defined. Public Health England (PHE) mandated collection of orthopaedic SSI data in 2004. Data submission is required in one of four categories (hip prosthesis, knee prosthesis, repair of neck of femur, reduction of long bone fracture) for one quarter per year. Trusts are encouraged to carry out post-discharge surveillance but this is not mandatory. Recent papers in the orthopaedic literature have highlighted the importance of SSI surveillance and the heterogeneity of surveillance methods. However, details of current orthopaedic SSI surveillance practice has not been described or quantified. Patients and Methods All 147 NHS trusts in England were audited using a structured questionnaire. Data was collected in the following categories: data collection; data submission to PHE; definitions used; resource constraints; post-discharge surveillance and SSI rates in the four PHE categories. The response rate was 87.7%. Results Variation in practice was clear in all categories in terms of methods and timings of data collection and data submission. There was little agreement on SSI definitions. At least six different definitions were used, some trusts using more than one definition. Post-discharge surveillance was carried out by 62% of respondents but there was again variation in both the methods and staff used. More than half of the respondents felt that SSI surveillance in their unit was limited by resource constraints. SSI rates ranged from 0% to 10%. Conclusion This paper quantifies the heterogeneity of SSI surveillance in England. It highlights the importance of adequate resourcing and the unreliability of relying on voluntary data collection and submission. Conformity of definitions and methods are recommended to enable meaningful SSI data to be collated. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2017;99-B:171–4.

Publisher

British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

Reference11 articles.

1. Harrington P, Wloch C, Elgohari S, Lamagni TProtocol for the Surveillance of Surgical Site Infection. https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/public-health-england (date last accessed 06 October 2016).

2. Clinician-led surgical site infection surveillance of orthopaedic procedures: a UK multi-centre pilot study

3. Elgohari S, Wloch C, Saei A, et al.2016).

4. No authors listed. Annual epidemiological report: Surgical site infections http://ecdc.europa.eu/en/healthtopics/Healthcare-associated_infections/surgical-site-infections/Pages/Annual-epidemiological-report-2016.aspx (date last accessed 19 December 2016).

5. Challenges in reporting surgical site infections to the national surgical site infection surveillance and suggestions for improvement

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