Measuring Surgical Site Infection From Linked Administrative Data Following Hip and Knee Replacement

2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 528-533 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lynn N. Lethbridge ◽  
C. Glen Richardson ◽  
Michael J. Dunbar
Author(s):  
Lynn Lethbridge ◽  
Michael Dunbar

IntroductionSurgical site infection (SSI) following joint replacement results in considerable disease burden. Costs include longer wait times for initial joint replacements which, in Nova Scotia (NS), are the longest in the country. Despite the widespread consequences, costs and utilization following knee replacement have not been comprehensively measured in Canada previously. Objectives and ApproachThe objective was to measure costs and health care utilization of SSI following knee replacement through linked administrative data sources. The study cohort was constructed using procedure codes from hospital discharge data. Diagnostic variables were examined to determine the occurrence of infection within one year of discharge. A non-infected control group matched on age, sex and comorbidities was also selected. Costs and utilization from inpatient, day surgery, clinic and physician claims data were totaled over two years following discharge. Resource weights multiplied by standard cost was used to measure hospital costs while outpatient costs were government approved payments to physicians. ResultsOver the 2005-2014 period, there were 204 infected cases for an overall 1-year rate of 1.8%. Non-infected controls visited a physician or were admitted to the hospital 21 times in the two year period following surgery compared to infected cases who averaged 40 (p-value Conclusion/ImplicationsCosts attributable to infection following primary knee replacement are substantial in NS affecting both inpatient and outpatient services. With an increased focus on program evaluation by policy-makers, infection control administrators should include regular monitoring of the direct and indirect costs of SSI on a system-wide basis using linked administrative data.


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (10) ◽  
pp. 1225-1232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles E. Edmiston ◽  
Abhishek S. Chitnis ◽  
Jason Lerner ◽  
Ekoué Folly ◽  
Chantal E. Holy ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Vorokov A.A. ◽  
Fadeev E.M. ◽  
Spichko A.A. ◽  
Aliev B.G. ◽  
Murzin E.A. ◽  
...  

1707 Total Hip and Knee Arthroplasty had been retrospectively analyzed for the research. All patients’ data (non-complicated post- Hip and Knee Arthroplasty (1st group - 1579 patients) and post- Hip and Knee Arthroplasty with surgical site infection in 12 months (2nd group - 128 patients)) had been used as an educational matrix for a mathematic forecast and as a construction of a prevention algorithm for septic complications in primary THA and TKA. The study had shown 14 significant criteria which can influence the occurrence of surgical site infection in THA and TKA. 12-month testing period of the software in prospective research (467 cases) had shown a significant decrease rate of surgical site infection in comparison to retrospective research (decrease of 7.5% in the prospective cases and 4.1% - in retrospective).


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