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Title: Beyond surgical care improvement program compliance: antibiotic prophylaxis implementation gaps. Author: Hawkins RB, Levy SM, Senter CE, Zhao JY, Doody K, Kao LS, Lally KP, Tsao K. Journal: Am J Surg; 2013 Oct; 206(4):451-6. PubMed ID: 23809676. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Despite increased compliance with Surgical Care Improvement Project infection measures, surgical-site infections are not decreasing. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that documented compliance with antibiotic prophylaxis guidelines on a pediatric surgery service does not reflect implementation fidelity or adherence to guidelines as intended. METHODS: A 7-week observational study of elective pediatric surgical cases was conducted. Adherence was evaluated for appropriate administration, type, timing, weight-based dosing, and redosing of antibiotics. RESULTS: Prophylactic antibiotics were administered appropriately in 141 of 143 cases (99%). Of 100 cases (70%) in which antibiotic prophylaxis was indicated, compliance was documented in 100% cases in the electronic medical record, but only 48% of cases adhered to all 5 guidelines. Lack of adherence was due primarily to dosing or timing errors. CONCLUSIONS: Lack of implementation fidelity in antibiotic prophylaxis guidelines may partly explain the lack of expected reduction in surgical-site infections. Future studies of Surgical Care Improvement Project effectiveness should measure adherence and implementation fidelity rather than just documented compliance.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]