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Aim: To promote standardized evidence based practices in the adult teaching hospitals at the univeristy of toronto within general surgery.Rationaleimprove patient care improve resident educationcapitalize on expertise within our divisionpossibly be ahead of the game" if LHINs exert more infl
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1. Best Practice in General SurgeryA University of Toronto, Division of General Surgery Initiative to Improve Patient Care
2. Aim: To promote standardized evidence based practices in the adult teaching hospitals at the univeristy of toronto within general surgery.
Rationale
improve patient care
improve resident education
capitalize on expertise within our division
possibly be “ahead of the game” if LHINs exert more influence
foster collaboration in clinical research
4. An example of an initiative designed to improve practice by engaging physicians.
BPIGS
Mission
Survey of general surgeons
5. SSI specifically:
Baseline data – is there a problem?
Survey of surgeons, chart review
Creation of guideline
Identification of stakeholders
SSI workshop – where is the problem?
Identification of champions at each hospital
Educational rounds by local O.L.
Engagement of Anaesthesia
Plan for feedback.
6. Steering Committee:
Robin McLeod (chair)
Cagla Eskicioglu
Darlene Fenech
Shawn Forbes
Anna Gagliardi
Avery Nathens
Marg McKenzie (coordinator)
7. Prioritization of Practice Improvements
(Results of Survey n=76)
SSI Prevention 86%
Fast Track Surgery 83%
VTE Prophylaxis 80%
Bowel Prep 73%
POI 71%
Transfusion 69%
Perioperative Steroids 65%
Ventral Hernia Repair 60%
Abdominal Wound Closure 60%
Inguinal Hernia Repair 53%
8. SSI Prevention-first initiative
Antibiotic Prophylaxis
Hair Removal
Temperature Control (Normothermia)
Supplemental Oxygen
9. Beliefs and practices:- Survey distributed to all general surgeons and residents- Heads of divisions interviewed in person, quality managers interviewed by telephone- Documents at the individual hospitals assessed
10. Survey: antimicrobial prophylaxis Do you use antibiotic prophylaxis for SSI prevention?
97.4% yes (similar for staff and resident surgeons)
Where is antibiotic prophylaxis delivered?
11.8% ward, 23.7% preop holding, 60.5% OR
In what way is antibiotic prophylaxis delivered?
82.9% IV, 11.8% oral, 6.6% combo
11. Survey: antimicrobial prophylaxis In what % of cases is it initiated within 1hr of incision?
no responses
Who is responsible for decisions about antibiotic and dose?
59.2% surgeon, 31.6% resident, 26.3% anaesthetist, 7.9% ward nurse, 6.6% surgical nurse, 2.6% pharmacist
12. Survey: antimicrobial prophylaxis What influences your decisions about antibiotic prophylaxis?
100% type of surgery
90.7% published guidelines
88.0% personal judgement
74.7% hospital policy or protocol
46.7% decision-making tool
What influences the timing/duration antibiotic prophylaxis?
83.8% forgetting
75.7% lack team communication
55.7% responsibility unclear
13. Survey: preop hair removal Do you use preop shaving for SSI prevention?
17.1% yes (27.8% residents, 7.5% staff)
Do you use preop clipping for SSI prevention?
77.6% yes (75.0% residents, 80.0% staff)
Do you use no hair removal for SSI prevention?
44.7% yes (52.8% residents, 37.5% staff)
14. Perioperative Hyperoxia Do you use perioperative hyperoxia for SSI prevention?
42.1% yes (50.0% residents, 35.0% staff)
15. Survey: beliefs about evidence
16. Chart Review Results To determine what the current practice is at the University of Toronto for reducing SSI’s
To determine whether these practices are adequately documented in the chart.
17. Methods Retrospective chart review
Each of the 7 teaching hospitals
>50 charts per hospital
Elective colorectal surgery
Consecutive charts prior to April 30, 2007.
18. Demographics Charts per hospital (48-83)
97.7% inpatients
52.5% male
Overall >60% had CR neoplasm
>55% had CRC
91.4% of patients no unusual findings at surgery
19. Pre Op ORAL Antibiotics?
20. Pre Op IV Antibiotics-Timing
21. Type of Pre Op IV Antibiotic given
22. Post OP IV Antibiotics-If administered - >24 hours?
23. Hair Removal
24. TemperatureProportion of Patients >36 C
25. FiO2
27. SSI Prevention Guideline–Process
Guideline developed-Avery Nathens, Shawn Forbes
Feedback sought from all GS, GS residents and key stakeholders
Workshop held on November 16-multidisciplinary from all 7 hospitals
Guideline modified and sent out for further feedback
33. Preoperative Hair Removal For the purpose of SSI prevention, hair removal should not be performed.
If hair removal is required, clipping should be done rather than shaving
34. Maintenance of Normothermia The patient’s temperature should be maintained at or above 36 celsius
This may be accomplished by pre operative warming measures, increasing the room temperature, warming devices and IV fluid warmers for cases longer than 1 hour.
35. Perioperative Hyperoxia Perioperative hyperoxia (FiO2 80%) should be considered as an adjunctive means to further reduced rates of SSI
36. Workshop Invited all heads of divisions of general surgery and 1-2 other surgeons from each hospital
1-2 anesthetists were invited
Infectious Disease
SSI nurses
OR nuses
Administrative persons involved in SSI prevention.
37. Workshop Introduction and endorsement
The evidence
The survey and perceptions
Chart Review
Guideline Discussion
Small group sessions between hospitals
38. After the SSI workshop… Implementation of the Guideline will occur locally at hospitals
Hospital champions – all surgeons
Provided a slide deck for talks to the multidisciplinary team
Normothermia Guideline
39. What Next? - teaching sessions with anaesthesia and GS residents
laminated cards for residents
Posters
Checklist (modified WHO)
Checklist for ascertaining PCN allergy
Anaesthesia Survey
Engaging champions and encouraging discussion between activities at each hospital
Repeat audit next summer
40. Acknowledgements Guideline development: Avery Nathens and Shawn Forbes
Interviews: Anna Gagliardi and Marg McKenzie
Document Analysis: Anna Gagliardi and Cagla Eskicioglu
Chart Review: Janet Chung, Darlene Fenech and Cagla Eskicioglu
41. Hospital Champions:
Paul Bernick-TEGH
Lorne Rotstein-TGH
Allan Okrainec-TWH
Robin McLeod-MSH
Darlene Fenech-SB
Avery Nathens-SMH
David Lindsay-SJH