Qualitative interviews to identify burden of illness, impacts and costs associated with surgical site infections

Author:

Gelhorn Heather L1,Anand Savita B2,Parvizi Javad3,Morrison Tiffany3,Yu Holly4,Pokrzywinski Robin1,Al-Jassar Gemma2,Chen Antonia F3

Affiliation:

1. Evidera, Bethesda, MD 208143, USA

2. Evidera, London, UK

3. Rothman Institute, Philadelphia, PA 191074, USA

4. Pfizer, Collegeville, PA 19426, USA

Abstract

Aim: To gather qualitative data from patients on the burden, impacts and costs of surgical site infections (SSI) requiring second surgeries. Patients & methods: 15 adults with SSIs from spinal (n = 4), knee replacement (n = 3) or hip replacement (n = 8) surgery participated in a focus group or individual interview. Patients completed the PROMIS Physical Functioning (PF) Short Form 10A (PROMIS-PF). Results: Patients reported impacts within four primary domains: PF/activity-related; social/emotional; financial/employment; and energy/sleep. The mean PROMIS-PF score was 39.3 (standard deviation = 12.1), over one standard deviation below 50, the US norm. Conclusion: SSIs impart a broad and significant impact on patients and their families. These burdens will be important to capture when selecting patient-reported outcome measures for this patient population.

Publisher

Future Medicine Ltd

Subject

Health Policy

Reference17 articles.

1. Patients' experiences of acquiring a deep surgical site infection: An interview study

2. European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Annual Epidemiological Report 2016 – Surgical Site Infections. ECDC, Stockholm, Sweden (2016). https://ecdc.europa.eu/sites/portal/files/documents/AER-HCAI_SSI.pdf

3. Deep prosthetic joint infection: a qualitative study of the impact on patients and their experiences of revision surgery

4. Patient narratives of surgical site infection: implications for practice

5. Staphylococcal Surgical Site Infections

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