Jurnal Internasional Medical Journal of Indonesia FKUI Vol. 29 No. 3 2020
Surgical Site Infection after Digestive Surgery in A Single Tertiary Hospital in Indonesia: Six Years of Data
Dublin Core
Title
Jurnal Internasional Medical Journal of Indonesia FKUI Vol. 29 No. 3 2020
Surgical Site Infection after Digestive Surgery in A Single Tertiary Hospital in Indonesia: Six Years of Data
Surgical Site Infection after Digestive Surgery in A Single Tertiary Hospital in Indonesia: Six Years of Data
Subject
digestive surgery, incidence, risk factors, surgical site infection
Description
BACKGROUND Surgical site infection (SSI) is responsible for increasing cost, morbidity, and mortality related to surgical operations, and has continued to be a significant problem even in hospitals with advanced facilities. This study aimed to describe the SSI among patients after digestive surgery.
METHODS From 2012 to 2017, all abdominal surgeries with SSI in Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital, except obstetrics and gynecology cases, were included in the study. Demographic characteristics, nutritional status, preoperative and intraoperative conditions, wound contamination/SSI type, and mortality data were reported.
RESULTS From 4,893 abdominal surgeries during the period, 135 subjects (2.8%) developed SSI with 42.2% of cases were the clean-contaminated type. Most of the cases were males (66.7%), aged between 25–65 years old (80.0%), subjective goal assessment B (46.7%), had normal weight (57.8%), had longer duration of surgery (70.4%), and had
preoperative stay between 2–15 days (65.2%). Most of the SSI patients survived (77.8%).
CONCLUSIONS Even though the SSI in Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital was low, it still needs improvement in preoperative care, intraoperative care, and SSI awareness. Therefore, further studies are required to understand how to reduce the incidence, risk, and SSI-related mortality.
METHODS From 2012 to 2017, all abdominal surgeries with SSI in Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital, except obstetrics and gynecology cases, were included in the study. Demographic characteristics, nutritional status, preoperative and intraoperative conditions, wound contamination/SSI type, and mortality data were reported.
RESULTS From 4,893 abdominal surgeries during the period, 135 subjects (2.8%) developed SSI with 42.2% of cases were the clean-contaminated type. Most of the cases were males (66.7%), aged between 25–65 years old (80.0%), subjective goal assessment B (46.7%), had normal weight (57.8%), had longer duration of surgery (70.4%), and had
preoperative stay between 2–15 days (65.2%). Most of the SSI patients survived (77.8%).
CONCLUSIONS Even though the SSI in Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital was low, it still needs improvement in preoperative care, intraoperative care, and SSI awareness. Therefore, further studies are required to understand how to reduce the incidence, risk, and SSI-related mortality.
Creator
Ridho Ardhi Syaiful, Yarman Mazni, Muhamad Luthfi Prasetyo, Toar Jean Maurice Lalisang
Publisher
Fakultas Kedokteran Universitas Indonesia
Date
2020-10-05
Contributor
Sri Wahyuni
Rights
ISSN : 0853-1773
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Text
Coverage
Jurnal Internasional Medical Journal of Indonesia FKUI Vol. 29 No. 3 2020
Files
Citation
Ridho Ardhi Syaiful, Yarman Mazni, Muhamad Luthfi Prasetyo, Toar Jean Maurice Lalisang, “Jurnal Internasional Medical Journal of Indonesia FKUI Vol. 29 No. 3 2020
Surgical Site Infection after Digestive Surgery in A Single Tertiary Hospital in Indonesia: Six Years of Data,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed October 14, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/885.
Surgical Site Infection after Digestive Surgery in A Single Tertiary Hospital in Indonesia: Six Years of Data,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed October 14, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/885.