Journal of Scientific Innovation in Medicine (Jun 2021)

Letter: Comprehensive Neurosurgery Infection Prevention and Control Practice in the COVID-19 “Return to Operate” Era

  • Georgios A. Maragkos,
  • Ian T. McNeill,
  • Remi Kessler,
  • Meikuen Xie,
  • Sara Schaefer,
  • Gopi Patel,
  • Joshua B. Bederson,
  • Raj K. Shrivastava

DOI
https://doi.org/10.29024/jsim.95
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2

Abstract

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The COVID-19 pandemic has forced neurosurgeons to adapt in the face of an unforeseen crisis, including reevaluating an important aspect of neurosurgical practice: surgical infection control and prevention. Before COVID-19, surgical site infections (SSI) remained a costly and burdensome issue within neurosurgery and the medical field at-large. Furthermore, as options for linking payment to quality of care and mandatory reporting of SSI expands, cranial and spine surgery can expect to face increased oversight and pressure in efforts to reduce SSI. The risk of COVID-19 transmission to both patients and healthcare workers has inspired rigorous attention to inspection control practices. Therefore, at our institution we have applied the momentum gained introducing new infection control practices and procedures to prevent of COVID-19 transmission to the adoption of a surgical infection control bundle. We describe our implementation spanning screening and selection of patients for surgery, intraoperative precautions, postoperative care, and systems for monitoring and feedback.

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