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Published in: Pediatric Surgery International 8/2018

01-08-2018 | Original Article

A multi-model intervention including an occlusive dressing and parental engagement to prevent pediatric surgical site infections for elective ambulatory procedures in a resource-constrained setting: an observational retrospective study from a tertiary center in Central Haiti

Authors: Neema Kaseje, Jacquemine Pinard, Willy Fils Jean Louis, Jean Louis MacLee, Andre Patrick Jeudy, Henri Ford

Published in: Pediatric Surgery International | Issue 8/2018

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Abstract

Purpose

In resource-limited settings, up to two-thirds of surgical patients develop surgical site infections (SSIs). Our aim was to implement a multimodal protocol including an occlusive dressing and parental engagement to achieve low SSI rates in patients undergoing elective ambulatory pediatric surgery at a tertiary center in Haiti.

Methods

An observational retrospective review of pediatric patients who underwent elective ambulatory procedures from August 2015 to May 2016 following the implementation of a multimodal protocol consisting of: washing and prepping the operative site with chlorhexidine; review of the surgical safety checklist; one dose of cefazolin before incision; after wound closure application of steri strips, gauze, and tegaderm; and with parental engagement maintenance of the dressing until the follow-up visit.

Results

We performed 119 procedures in 99 patients. Mean age was 6.2 years. The most common procedure was inguinal hernia repair (66%); 89% of parents returned to clinic with their children for the follow-up visit, which occurred on average on day 7.6 (range 3–40 days). The SSI rate was 1% (CI 0.00–0.03).

Conclusion

Implementing a multimodal protocol including an occlusive dressing and parental engagement led to a 1% SSI rate in a resource-constrained setting.
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Metadata
Title
A multi-model intervention including an occlusive dressing and parental engagement to prevent pediatric surgical site infections for elective ambulatory procedures in a resource-constrained setting: an observational retrospective study from a tertiary center in Central Haiti
Authors
Neema Kaseje
Jacquemine Pinard
Willy Fils Jean Louis
Jean Louis MacLee
Andre Patrick Jeudy
Henri Ford
Publication date
01-08-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Pediatric Surgery International / Issue 8/2018
Print ISSN: 0179-0358
Electronic ISSN: 1437-9813
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00383-018-4302-9

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