Tweet
Share
Myworld |
Sign Up
|
Login
Home
Browse
Featured
Latest
Popular
Templates
Patients
Blog
Surgical Site Infection
Send This
Download
Comment
Favourite
more
Add to your Conference/Group
Please Select--
Add your comments:
Insert YouTube Videos inside your Slideworld presentation Copy and paste the video URL from YouTube, choose where to insert the video, and press “Submit”. The video will play in your slideshow after sometime.
Enter YouTube video URL
Enter Slide No where you want to insert youtube videos
Rating :
Rate It:
Embed :
Mohammed
on Mar 19, 2013 Says :
good work
Kesava
on Nov 10, 2012 Says :
can u pls mail the presentation to
dr.kesavam@gmail.com
as i am presenting similar topic in my institution.it will be helpful.thanks in advance.
Zubair
on Sep 08, 2012 Says :
very nice
RAJESH
on Jan 29, 2012 Says :
Well presented
Robert
on Oct 05, 2009 Says :
Great demostration
Pace Systems
on Sep 13, 2009 Says :
hi
Post a comment
Post Comment on Twitter
Post Comment on SlideWorld
Comments:
Subscribe to follow-up comments
SlideWorld will not store your password. SlideWorld will maintain your privacy.
Twitter Username:
Twitter Password:
Comments:
Email:
Subscribe to follow-up comments
1 Favorites
ctyu1
, favourited this 4 Years ago.
First
Prev
[1]
Next
Last
Notes
Show Notes
Hide Notes
Slide 1 :
1 Surgical Site Infection Collaborative
Slide 2 :
2 January 1 – September 2, 2001 13 orthopedic surgeons involved in 36 musculoskeletal cases that developed infections
Slide 3 :
3 #of Days Between Total Joint Replacement Infections January 1, 2002 through June 2003
Slide 4 :
4 Trending of Hip Prosthesis Infection Rates NNIS Risk 1 NNIS Risk 0
Slide 5 :
5 Trending of Knee Prosthesis Infection Rates NNIS Risk 1 NNIS Risk 2
Slide 6 :
6 Surveillance Focus Included ASA score Length of surgery Number of personnel in OR suite Microorganism cultured Timing of preoperative antibiotic
Slide 7 :
7 Time Line of Events 01/28/02 Orthopedic surgical infections report presented to Infection Control Committee 03/06/02 04/15/02 05/02/02 05/09/02 05/16/02 Meeting with key players regarding surgical wound infections Teleconference – Multifactorial Interventions to Prevent Surgical Site Infections Infection Control Nurse and Hospital Epidemiologist perform and videotape a surgical scrub using chlorhexadine 4%/isopropyl alcohol Memo sent to orthopedic surgeons recommending chlorhexadine 4%/isopropyl alcohol as skin prep of choice Infection Control Nurse and Hospital Epidemiologist meet with orthopedic surgeons regarding ortho infections in 2001
Slide 8 :
8 Time Line of Events 06/24/02 Infection Control Nurse and Hospital Epidemiologist meet with Board Members to discuss ortho surgical wound infections Meeting with key players to discuss ortho surgical wound infections Discussion regarding ortho surgical infections deferred at Ortho Dept. Meeting Ortho surgeon addressed the issue of ortho infections briefly at department meeting Meeting with Hospital CEO and key players regarding ortho infections Hospital Epidemiologist presents recommendations at Ortho Q.A. Meeting 10/17/02 09/16/02 12/16/02 12/30/02 10/28/02 09/30/02 Orthopedic infections on Ortho Dept. Meeting agenda, discussion deferred
Slide 9 :
9
Slide 10 :
10 Recommendations Employ chlorhexadine 4% / isopropyl alcohol as skin prep Use clippers for hair removal Maintain a core body temperature of > 36ºc throughout surgery Administer oxygen at 80% / 50% intra-operatively and at 80% by sealed mask/conventional non-rebreather mask for first two hours of recovery Test blood glucose thirty minutes after incision time Administer appropriate antibiotic within 30 minutes of incision time Discontinue antibiotics within 24 hours
Slide 11 :
11 Team Members Raymond Palesch, MD – Orthopedic Surgeon, Trauma Medical Director Neil Barg, MD – Hospital Epidemiologist Carl Olden, MD – Medical Staff Quality Amy Crook, MD – Anesthesiologist Mario Domenzain, MD – OB/GYN Paul Novak, CRNA Ken Eakin, RN – Surgical Services Supervisor Kristy Cure, RN – Surgical Services Nurse Manager Connie Conklin, RN – Ortho/Neuro/IV Tx Nurse Manager Gay Scott, RN, CIC – Infection Control Nurse Greg Matsuura, Pharm-D Kay Anyan, RHIA – Director Medical Staff Services Linda Bluhm, CPHQ – Director Performance Improvement Sandy Dahl, RN – VP Nursing & Patient Care Linda Haralson, RN – L&D/Peds/NICU Nurse Manager Cecilia Bray, RN – Women’s/Gen. Surgery Nurse Manager
Slide 12 :
12 Timely Antibiotics Administered Anesthesia/Nursing responsible Development of protocol for administration within 30 minutes prior to incision 2 gms of antibiotic for adults over age 16 Repeat intraoperative dosing at 3 hours
Slide 13 :
13 Antibiotics Within One Hour
Slide 14 :
14 Appropriate Antibiotics Given Initiation of Antibiotic Review of perioperative antibiotics Development of Penicillin Allergy Algorithm
Slide 15 :
15 Appropriate Antibiotics Given
Slide 16 :
16 Antibiotic Prophylaxis Given within 30 minutes of cut time Exception: Vancomycin and Levofloxacin 1 hr infusion time Infusion must be finished prior to cut Recommended duration discontinue within 24hrs1 Bratzler DW, et al. Antimicrobial Prophylaxis for Surgery: An advisory statement from the National Surgical Infection Prevention Project. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2004;38:1706-1715 Antimicrobial prophylaxis for surgery. Treatment Guidelines from the Medical letter, 2004; 2(20):27-32.
Slide 17 :
17 Orthopedic Antibiotic Prophylaxis 2gms Cefazolin IV within 30 minutes of incision in all patients over age 16. If Penicillin allergic use Vancomycin 1gm IV over a 60 minute infusion time.
Slide 18 :
18 Penicillin Allergy Assessment Tool (Elective Orthopedic Surgery) Has the patient been able to tolerate a cephalosporin without an allergic reaction? Does the patient have a reported cephalosporin allergy? What type of penicillin reaction was it? Did the patient develop severe hypotension, respiratory distress, or systemic swelling? No Use Vancomycin Use Cefazolin Use Cefazolin Yes No No No Yes Yes Did the patient develop hives (raised, itchy, systemic welts) during a treatment course? Yes
Slide 19 :
19
Slide 20 :
20 Antibiotics Discontinued in 24 Hours Nurse Manager provided SSI collaborative PowerPoint presentation to Surgical Services staff - 3/31/03 Physician Champion provided SSI collaborative slide presentation to orthopedic surgeons and anesthesia – 4/21/03 Orthopedic Section voted to revise order sheet to discontinue antibiotics in 24 hours – 5/27/03
Slide 21 :
21 Orthopedic Post-op Orders Page 2 of 2 .Antiemetic Protocol .Respiratory: If on Oxygen, oximetry every 8 hrs, D/C O2 when SAT >92% Respiratory Care, evaluate and treat ? Incentive Spirometry .Activity: ? Bed Rest ? OOB this PM ? Chair TID Physical Therapy: Begin treatment: ?this P.M. ?in A.M. _______________WB affected extremity Total Hip Protocol ______________________ WB affected extremity Total Knee Protocol ____________________ WB affected extremity Elevate affected extremity ? 6” above heart level ? heart level ? stockinette ? calves elevated on pillows CPM _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Other _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ .Misc: X-Ray _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Dressing __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Autotransfusion Discontinue Hemovac ? 24 hours post-op ? 48 hours post-op R/C or straight cath PRN inability to void – Discontinue R/C 48 hrs post-op, reinsert PRN. C&S PRN TEDS Protocol ? SCD Protocol ? Abduction Bolster SS consult – Discharge Planning Cold Therapy Ice pack to affected area 20-30 minutes 3 times/shift (do not place ice bag directly on skin) Physician’s Signature: _______________________________________________________________________ Date/Time: ______________________________________________
Slide 22 :
22 Antibiotic Discontinued in 24 Hours
Slide 23 :
23 Hair Removed Appropriately Two clippers stocked in each OR suite Re-inserviced staff via poster boards Specific staff member assigned responsibility for stocking Use of clippers implemented for other surgical procedures
Slide 24 :
24 Hair Removed Appropriately
Slide 25 :
25 Normothermia Calibration checked on forced air warming machines and adjusted Forced air warming machines placed on preventative maintenance schedule Pre-op warming blankets Increase of room temperature abandoned Abandoned cooling vests for surgeons after trial Space hats in pre-op Underbody warmers in OR
Slide 26 :
26 Body Temperatures
Slide 27 :
27 Supplemental Oxygen Implemented use of non-rebreather mask at high flow Patient education regarding rationale in pre-op holding areas Set standard mask removal time at 2 hours post arrival to patient room Non-rebreather mask application to patient with initiation of oxygen flow Utilization of timer abandoned
Slide 28 :
28 Supplemental Oxygen Perioperatively
Slide 29 :
29 Patient Satisfaction Non-Rebreather Mask Interview each patient post discontinuation 246 out of 255 patients were satisfied with the use of the non-rebreather mask (96.5%)
Slide 30 :
30 Chlorhexadine 4%/Alcohol Prep March 19, 2003 – February 29, 2004 Total Knee/Total Joint Recommendations
Slide 31 :
31 31
Slide 32 :
32 Other Inpatient Ortho Started July 2003
Slide 33 :
33 Neuro Surgery Started November 2003
Slide 34 :
34 March 2003 Ortho Hips and Knees July 2003 Other Ortho November 2003 Neuro January 2004 C-Sections May 2004 OB/GYN November 2004 Colon February 2005 General Surgery and Urology September 2005 Wound Care, Podiatry, and Plastics SSI Collaborative 3 Year Plan
Slide 35 :
35 Appropriate Prophylactic Antibiotic Selected
Slide 36 :
36 Percent of Abx Given Within 1 Hour of Incision
Slide 37 :
37 Percent of Prophylactic Abx Discontinued Within 24 Hours After Surgery End Time
Slide 38 :
38 38
Slide 39 :
39 Trending of Total Hip Infection Rates NNIS Rate: 0.88 NNIS Rate 1.61
Slide 40 :
40 Trending of Total Knee Infection Rates NNIS Rate: 1.26 NNIS Rate: 0.87
Slide 41 :
41 Recommendations Employ chlorhexadine 4% / isopropyl alcohol as skin prep Use clippers for hair removal Maintain a core body temperature of > 36ºc throughout surgery Administer oxygen at 80% / 50% intra-operatively and at 80% by sealed mask/conventional non-rebreather mask for first two hours of recovery Test blood glucose thirty minutes after incision time Administer appropriate antibiotic within 30 minutes of incision time Discontinue antibiotics within 24 hours
Slide 42 :
42
Slide 43 :
43 Surgical Site Infection Collaborative
Vulvovaginal Infections
Surgical infection
Antibiotic Prophylax...
Surgical Excision of...
Sexually Transmitted...
Early surgical thera...
Free Powerpoint Templates
SlidesOnline
5 Years ago.
12290 Views, 1 favourite
PowerPoint Presentation on Surgical Site Infection or PowerPoint Presentation on
More By User
Flag as inappropriate
Select your reason for flagging this presentation as inappropriate. If needed, use the
feedback
form to let us know more details.
None
Pornographic
Defamatory
Illegal/Unlawful
Other Terms Of Service Violation
Copy Right
Cancel
Browse
|
Powerpoint Templates
|
Tags
|
Contact
|
About Us
|
Privacy
|
FAQ
|
Blog
© Slideworld