Lumetra Release: New Study Reveals Need For Change In Surgical Procedures

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 23 /PRNewswire/ -- Lumetra today announced progress in surgical infection prevention after the Archives of Surgery published a study highlighting the need for better, more consistent practices to address infection risk factors. Lumetra plans to intensify its work with local hospitals to redesign procedures and protocols so that surgical patients are given antibiotics within sixty minutes before surgery begins, the timeframe most effective for preventing infections.

The precise timing of administering antibiotics to prevent surgical infections is critical, but often not strictly regulated. In the Archives of Surgery study, titled “Use of Antimicrobial Prophylaxis for Major Surgery: Baseline Results From the National Surgical Infection Prevention Project,” researchers found that only a little more than half of Medicare beneficiaries undergoing major surgery received antibiotics in the optimal timeframe.

In the article, researchers report the results of their analysis of medical records from 2965 acute care hospitals throughout the United States, involving a random sample of 34,133 Medicare inpatients undergoing major surgeries during 2001 -- including open cardiac, vascular, colorectal, total hip, total knee, and hysterectomy. Data was collected in conjunction with the 2002 launch of a surgical infection prevention project jointly sponsored by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

“Lumetra recognizes the importance of this research and, seeing the opportunity for significant improvement, already has efforts underway to address the problem of surgical infection prevention,” said Jo Ellen Hylind Ross, Lumetra’s CEO.

As Lumetra works with local hospitals to improve delivery and administration of preventative antibiotics, it is resulting in widespread successes across the state as well as plans for an expanded focus on surgical infection prevention in the near future.

At Glendale Adventist Medical Center in Glendale, California, the rates of infection-preventing antibiotic administration have risen dramatically. Prior to the Collaborative, the medical facility had a deep wound infection rate of 7%. Implementing techniques learned in Lumetra’s sessions, that infection rate was reduced to 0%. Moreover, a year later, Glendale Adventist has sustained the improvements in surgical patient care protocols implemented as a result of the Collaborative, maintaining a 0% deep wound infection rate.

As part of Medicare’s Hospital Quality Initiative, Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs) like Lumetra promote rapid resolution of hospital quality issues and sharing of “best practices” to assist hospitals in improving their quality of care in several areas. In addition to surgical infection prevention, focus areas include heart attack, heart failure and pneumonia.

Lumetra

CONTACT: Diana Parker of Lumetra, +1-415-677-2122, ordlparker@caqio.sdps.org