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  1. Artikel: A Single Center Retrospective Evaluation of a Surgical Strategy to Combat Persistent Soft Tissue Wounds Utilizing Absorbable Antibiotic Beads.

    Gorvetzian, Joseph W / Kunkel, Ryan P / Demas, Christopher P

    Advances in wound care

    2019  Band 8, Heft 2, Seite(n) 49–57

    Abstract: Objective: ...

    Abstract Objective:
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2019-02-13
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2650541-1
    ISSN 2162-1934 ; 2162-1918
    ISSN (online) 2162-1934
    ISSN 2162-1918
    DOI 10.1089/wound.2018.0795
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Artikel: Operating room staff and surgeon documentation curriculum improves wound classification accuracy

    Gorvetzian, Joseph W / Epler, Katharine E / Schrader, Samuel / Romero, Joshua M / Schrader, Ronald / Greenbaum, Alissa / McKee, Rohini

    Heliyon. 2018 Aug., v. 4, no. 8

    2018  

    Abstract: Misclassification of wounds in the operating room (OR) can adversely affect surgical site infection (SSI) reporting and reimbursement. This study aimed to measure the effects of a curriculum on documentation of surgical wound classification (SWC) for ... ...

    Abstract Misclassification of wounds in the operating room (OR) can adversely affect surgical site infection (SSI) reporting and reimbursement. This study aimed to measure the effects of a curriculum on documentation of surgical wound classification (SWC) for operating room staff and surgeons.Accuracy of SWC was determined by comparing SWC documented by OR staff during the original operation to SWC determined by in-depth chart review. Patients 18 years or older undergoing inpatient surgical procedures were included. Two plan-do-act-study (PDSA) cycles were implemented over the course of 9 months. A total of 747 charts were reviewed. Accuracy of SWC documentation was retrospectively assessed across 248 randomly selected surgeries during a 5-week period prior to interventions and compared to 244 cases and 255 cases of post-intervention data from PDSA1 and PDSA2, respectively. Changes in SWC accuracy were assessed pre- and post-intervention using the kappa coefficient. A p-value for change in agreement was computed by comparing pre- and post-intervention kappa.Inaccurate documentation of surgical wound class decreased significantly following curriculum implementation (kappa improved from 0.553 to 0.739 and 0.757; p = 0.001). Classification accuracy improved across all wound classes; however, class III and IV wounds were more frequently misclassified than class I and II wounds, both before and after the intervention.Implementation of a multidisciplinary documentation curriculum resulted in a significant decrease in SWC documentation error. Improved accuracy of SWC reporting may facilitate a better assessment of SSI risk in a complex patient population.
    Schlagwörter curriculum ; patients ; risk
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsverlauf 2018-08
    Erscheinungsort Elsevier Ltd
    Dokumenttyp Artikel
    Anmerkung NAL-AP-2-clean
    ZDB-ID 2835763-2
    ISSN 2405-8440
    ISSN 2405-8440
    DOI 10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00728
    Datenquelle NAL Katalog (AGRICOLA)

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  3. Artikel: Operating room staff and surgeon documentation curriculum improves wound classification accuracy.

    Gorvetzian, Joseph W / Epler, Katharine E / Schrader, Samuel / Romero, Joshua M / Schrader, Ronald / Greenbaum, Alissa / McKee, Rohini

    Heliyon

    2018  Band 4, Heft 8, Seite(n) e00728

    Abstract: Background: Misclassification of wounds in the operating room (OR) can adversely affect surgical site infection (SSI) reporting and reimbursement. This study aimed to measure the effects of a curriculum on documentation of surgical wound classification ( ...

    Abstract Background: Misclassification of wounds in the operating room (OR) can adversely affect surgical site infection (SSI) reporting and reimbursement. This study aimed to measure the effects of a curriculum on documentation of surgical wound classification (SWC) for operating room staff and surgeons.
    Methods: Accuracy of SWC was determined by comparing SWC documented by OR staff during the original operation to SWC determined by in-depth chart review. Patients 18 years or older undergoing inpatient surgical procedures were included. Two plan-do-act-study (PDSA) cycles were implemented over the course of 9 months. A total of 747 charts were reviewed. Accuracy of SWC documentation was retrospectively assessed across 248 randomly selected surgeries during a 5-week period prior to interventions and compared to 244 cases and 255 cases of post-intervention data from PDSA1 and PDSA2, respectively. Changes in SWC accuracy were assessed pre- and post-intervention using the kappa coefficient. A p-value for change in agreement was computed by comparing pre- and post-intervention kappa.
    Results: Inaccurate documentation of surgical wound class decreased significantly following curriculum implementation (kappa improved from 0.553 to 0.739 and 0.757; p = 0.001). Classification accuracy improved across all wound classes; however, class III and IV wounds were more frequently misclassified than class I and II wounds, both before and after the intervention.
    Conclusion: Implementation of a multidisciplinary documentation curriculum resulted in a significant decrease in SWC documentation error. Improved accuracy of SWC reporting may facilitate a better assessment of SSI risk in a complex patient population.
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2018-08-08
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2835763-2
    ISSN 2405-8440
    ISSN 2405-8440
    DOI 10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00728
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Artikel ; Online: Operating room staff and surgeon documentation curriculum improves wound classification accuracy

    Joseph W. Gorvetzian / Katharine E. Epler / Samuel Schrader / Joshua M. Romero / Ronald Schrader / Alissa Greenbaum / Rohini McKee

    Heliyon, Vol 4, Iss 8, Pp e00728- (2018)

    2018  

    Abstract: Background: Misclassification of wounds in the operating room (OR) can adversely affect surgical site infection (SSI) reporting and reimbursement. This study aimed to measure the effects of a curriculum on documentation of surgical wound classification ( ... ...

    Abstract Background: Misclassification of wounds in the operating room (OR) can adversely affect surgical site infection (SSI) reporting and reimbursement. This study aimed to measure the effects of a curriculum on documentation of surgical wound classification (SWC) for operating room staff and surgeons. Methods: Accuracy of SWC was determined by comparing SWC documented by OR staff during the original operation to SWC determined by in-depth chart review. Patients 18 years or older undergoing inpatient surgical procedures were included. Two plan-do-act-study (PDSA) cycles were implemented over the course of 9 months. A total of 747 charts were reviewed. Accuracy of SWC documentation was retrospectively assessed across 248 randomly selected surgeries during a 5-week period prior to interventions and compared to 244 cases and 255 cases of post-intervention data from PDSA1 and PDSA2, respectively. Changes in SWC accuracy were assessed pre- and post-intervention using the kappa coefficient. A p-value for change in agreement was computed by comparing pre- and post-intervention kappa. Results: Inaccurate documentation of surgical wound class decreased significantly following curriculum implementation (kappa improved from 0.553 to 0.739 and 0.757; p = 0.001). Classification accuracy improved across all wound classes; however, class III and IV wounds were more frequently misclassified than class I and II wounds, both before and after the intervention. Conclusion: Implementation of a multidisciplinary documentation curriculum resulted in a significant decrease in SWC documentation error. Improved accuracy of SWC reporting may facilitate a better assessment of SSI risk in a complex patient population.
    Schlagwörter Surgery ; Education ; Science (General) ; Q1-390 ; Social sciences (General) ; H1-99
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2018-08-01T00:00:00Z
    Verlag Elsevier
    Dokumenttyp Artikel ; Online
    Datenquelle BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (Lebenswissenschaftliche Auswahl)

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