A surgical patient safety program has been shown to reduce surgical site infections by 33 percent in patients who undergo colorectal procedures, according to a new study published in the August issue of the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.
While participating in an American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program pilot project, the colorectal operating team at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore discovered a very high colorectal wound infection rate, approximately 30 percent. Researchers implemented the CUSP program, which focuses on five strategies to reduce healthcare-associated infections:
1. Educate staff on the science of safety
2. Identify defects
3. Engage executives
4. Learn from defects
5. Implement teamwork tool
In one year, researchers found that the overall SSI rate fell from 27.3 percent to 18.2 percent, a reduction of 33 percent in the high-risk colorectal surgery patient population.
While participating in an American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program pilot project, the colorectal operating team at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore discovered a very high colorectal wound infection rate, approximately 30 percent. Researchers implemented the CUSP program, which focuses on five strategies to reduce healthcare-associated infections:
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1. Educate staff on the science of safety
2. Identify defects
3. Engage executives
4. Learn from defects
5. Implement teamwork tool
In one year, researchers found that the overall SSI rate fell from 27.3 percent to 18.2 percent, a reduction of 33 percent in the high-risk colorectal surgery patient population.
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