PERCUTANEOUS INJURIES DURING SURGICAL-PROCEDURES

被引:196
作者
TOKARS, JI
BELL, DM
CULVER, DH
MARCUS, R
MENDELSON, MH
SLOAN, EP
FARBER, BF
FLIGNER, D
CHAMBERLAND, ME
MCKIBBEN, PS
MARTONE, WJ
机构
[1] N SHORE UNIV HOSP,CORNELL UNIV MED COLL,DEPT MED,DIV INFECT DIS,MANHASSET,NY 11030
[2] CHRIST HOSP,DEPT EMERGENCY MED,OAK LAWN,IL
[3] CUNY MT SINAI SCH MED,DEPT MED,DIV INFECT DIS,NEW YORK,NY 10029
[4] COOK CTY HOSP,DEPT EMERGENCY MED,CHICAGO,IL 60612
来源
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION | 1992年 / 267卷 / 21期
关键词
D O I
10.1001/jama.267.21.2899
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objective. --To study the numbers and circumstances of percutaneous injuries (eg, needle sticks, cuts) that occur during surgical procedures. Surgical personnel risk infection with blood-borne pathogens from percutaneous injuries; some injuries might also place patients at risk by exposing them to a health care worker's blood. Design. --Observers present at 1382 surgical procedures recorded information about the procedure, the personnel present, and percutaneous injuries that occurred. Setting. --Four US teaching hospitals during 1990. Participants. --Operating room personnel in five surgical specialties. Main Outcome Measures. --Numbers and circumstances of percutaneous injuries among surgical personnel and instances in which surgical instruments that had injured a worker recontacted the patient's surgical wound. Results. --Ninety-nine injuries occurred during 95 (6.9%) of the 1382 procedures. Seventy-six injuries (77%) were caused by suture needles and affected the nondominant hand (62 injuries [63%]), especially the distal forefinger. The risk of injury adjusted for confounding variables by logistic regression was higher during vaginal hysterectomy (odds ratio [OR], 3.5; 95% confidence interval [Cl], 1.6 to 7.5) and lower during certain orthopedic procedures (OR, 0.2; Cl, 0.1 to 0.7) than during 11 other types of procedures (reference group; OR, 1.0). Use of fingers rather than an instrument to hold the tissue being sutured was associated with 35 injuries (35%). Eighty-eight injuries (89%) were sustained by resident or attending surgeons; in 28 (32%) of the 88 injuries in surgeons, the sharp object that caused the injury recontacted the patient. Conclusion. --Percutaneous injuries occur regularly during surgery, placing surgical personnel and, to a lesser extent, patients at risk for infection with blood-borne pathogens. Many such injuries may be preventable with changes in devices, techniques, or protective equipment; all such measures require careful evaluation to determine their efficacy in reducing injury and their effect on patient care.
引用
收藏
页码:2899 / 2904
页数:6
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