Sustaining Improvement: Implementation and Spread of a Surgical Site Infection Bundle

Author:

Russell Tara A.12,Chung Hallie1,Riad Christina3,Reardon Sarah3,Kazanjian Kevork3,Cherry Robert4,Hines O. Joe1,Lin Anne3

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California

2. Department of Veterans Affairs, Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program, Los Angeles, California

3. Division of Colorectal Surgery, Department of General Surgery, University of California Los Angles, Los Angeles, California

4. University of California Los Angeles Health System, Los Angeles, California

Abstract

Surgical site infections (SSIs) are considered a quality metric across surgical specialties and are a major cause of increased readmissions and overall costs to surgical patients. Bundled interventions have demonstrated efficacy in reducing SSIs in various surgical fields, yet the ability to sustain and spread interventions while continuing to reduce infection rates is a significant challenge. This study assessed the implementation and sustainability of an SSI bundle, which was initially piloted within the colorectal surgery division and then spread to additional general surgery services. Outcomes (risk-adjusted ACS-NSQIP odds ratio and observed to expected (O:E) SSI rates) and process measures were monitored on run charts throughout the course of the intervention. By the end of the study period, ACS-NSQIP risk-adjusted odds ratios for SSIs decreased from 1.22 to 0.95 for colorectal procedure targeted and 1.32 to 1.04 for all general surgery procedures ( P < 0.05). O:E ratios showed similar reductions. SSI reductions were associated with process measure compliance. This study demonstrates that effective implementation within a single surgical division provides the foundation for spread of a SSI bundle, which results in continued and sustained reductions in SSI rates.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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