Post-discharge surveillance: can patients reliably diagnose surgical wound infections?


Autoria(s): Whitby, M.; McLaws, M.L.; Collopy, B.; Looke, D.F.L.; Doidge, S.; Henderson, B.; Selvey, L.; Gardner, G.; Stackelroth, J.; Sartor, A.
Data(s)

01/11/2002

Resumo

Post-discharge surgical wound infection surveillance is an important part of many infection control programs. It is frequently undertaken by patient self-assessment, prompted either by a telephone or postal questionnaire. To assess the reliability of this method, 290 patients were followed for six weeks post-operatively. Their wounds were photographed and also covertly assessed for signs of infection by two experienced infection control nurses (ICNs). Patients also responded to a postal questionnaire seeking evidence of infection at both week four and week six post-surgery. Correlation between the patient's assessment of their wound and the ICNs diagnosis was poor (r = 0. 37) with a low positive predictive value (28.7%), although negative predictive value was high (98.2%). Assessment of photos for signs of infection by two experienced clinicians also correlated poorly with the ICNs diagnosis of infection (r = 0.54). The patient's recall of prescription of an antibiotic by their general practitioner (GP) for wound infection during the postoperative period correlated best with the ICNs diagnosis (r = 0.76). This latter measure, particularly when confirmed by the GP in those patients reporting an infection, appears to provide the most valid and resource efficient marker of post-discharge surgical wound infection.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:64011

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

W B Saunders

Palavras-Chave #Infectious Diseases #Infection #Post-discharge #Self-assessment #Surgical Wound #Hospital Discharge #Communication #C1 #321208 Primary Health Care #730299 Public health not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article