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An interdisciplinary approach to improve surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis

Oisín Conaty (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland)
Leah Gaughan (Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland)
Colum Downey (Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland)
Noreen Carolan (Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland)
Megan Joanne Brophy (Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland)
Ruth Kavanagh (Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland)
Deborah A.A. McNamara (Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland)
Edmond Smyth (Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland)
Karen Burns (Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland)
Fidelma Fitzpatrick (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland)

International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance

ISSN: 0952-6862

Article publication date: 12 March 2018

338

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to improve surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis (SAP) prescribing in orthopaedic surgery using the model for improvement framework.

Design/methodology/approach

Orthopaedic patients receiving joint replacements, hip fracture repairs or open-reduction internal-fixation procedures were included. Antimicrobial(s); dose, time of administration and duration of SAP were evaluated for appropriateness based on the local SAP guidelines. After baseline data collection, a driver diagram was constructed with interventions devised for plan-do-study-act cycles. Data were fed back weekly using a point prevalence design (PPD). Interventions included SAP guideline changes, reminders and tools to support key messages.

Findings

SAP in 168 orthopaedic surgeries from 15 June 2016 to 31 January 2017 was studied. Prescribing appropriateness improved from 20 to 78 per cent. Junior doctor changeover necessitated additional education and reminders.

Practical implications

Due to constant staff changeover; continuous data collection, communication, education and reminders are essential to ensure continuous compliance with clinical guidance. Patients with hip fractures are difficult to weigh, requiring weight estimation for weight-based antimicrobial dosing. Unintended consequences of interventions included the necessity to change pre-operative workflow to accommodate reconstitution time of additional antimicrobials and inadvertent continuation of new antimicrobials post-operatively.

Originality/value

Rather than perform the traditional retrospective focused audit, we established a prospective, continuous, interventional quality improvement (QI) project focusing on internal processes within the control of the project team with rapid cyclical changes and interventions. The weekly PPD was pragmatic and enabled the QI project to be sustained with no additional resources.

Keywords

Citation

Conaty, O., Gaughan, L., Downey, C., Carolan, N., Brophy, M.J., Kavanagh, R., McNamara, D.A.A., Smyth, E., Burns, K. and Fitzpatrick, F. (2018), "An interdisciplinary approach to improve surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis", International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance, Vol. 31 No. 2, pp. 162-172. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJHCQA-05-2017-0078

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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