Antibiotic Received One Hour Prior to Surgical Incision - Inpatient |
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It is recommended that preventive antibiotics be given to patients within one hour of the start of surgery. The chances of getting an infection are reduced if antibiotics are already working in the bloodstream when the surgeon starts the operation. Hospitals can prevent surgical wound infections. Medical research shows that surgery patients who receive antibiotics within the hour before their surgery are less likely to get wound infections. The timing is important: receiving an antibiotic earlier, or after surgery begins, is not as effective. Hospital staff strive to ensure that patients receive antibiotics at the right time. The types of surgery that are currently measured for use of preventive antibiotics at SBUH are: coronary artery bypass graft (CABG), heart valves and other heart procedures, hip replacement, knee replacement, colon surgery, abdominal and vaginal hysterectomy, vascular surgery, and any other type of inpatient surgery. At SBUH, 99% of a sample of 366 eligible surgical patients received preventive antibiotics within an hour of their operation starting. A high score is better than a low score.
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