Open Access
Compliance of Hour-1 Sepsis Care Bundle in Patients with Surgical Infection Requiring Surgery in Hospital Tengku Ampuan Afzan
Author(s) -
Dhayalan Ganisan,
Jiffre Din
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international medical journal malaysia/iium medical journal malaysia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.139
H-Index - 9
eISSN - 2735-2285
pISSN - 1823-4631
DOI - 10.31436/imjm.v18i2.670
Subject(s) - medicine , sepsis , surviving sepsis campaign , organ dysfunction , mortality rate , retrospective cohort study , surgery , epidemiology , blood culture , intensive care medicine , antibiotics , septic shock , severe sepsis , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
Introduction: Sepsis is life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection. According to Sepsis 3 definition, an increase of 2 or more in the qSOFA score should create a suspicion of sepsis and organ dysfunction. It is a dire condition as studies show; patients with a qSOFA score of ≥ 2 have a mortality rate of ≥ 0%. The Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines have depicted an Hour-1 Sepsis Bundle in managing patients with sepsis which has proven to reduce morbidity and mortality. The objective of this study was to analyze the demographic data of patients presenting with surgical sepsis requiring surgery and compliance to the Hour-1 Sepsis Bundle, concurrently the mortality rate of these patients. Materials and Method: A retrospective epidemiological study was done from the 1st of October to the 31st of December 2018. Patients included in the study were all patients with evidence of surgical infection requiring emergency surgery and patients presenting with trauma were excluded. This number of patients was then scrutinized into patients with evidence of sepsis, subsequently the compliance to the Hour-1 Sepsis Bundle. Results: The analysis showed that 23 of the 156 patients with surgical infection requiring surgery were in sepsis. Of this, 5 patients succumbed during the same admission. Results also showed patients who developed sepsis in their 5th decade of life are more susceptible to death. In accordance with the Hour-1 Sepsis Bundle, compliance to measuring lactate level was 70%, obtaining blood culture was 47.8%, administration of antibiotics was 82.6% and rapid administration of crystalloid was 0%. All three patients requiring vasopressors were started on vasopressors within the hour. Conclusion: Compliance to the Hour-1 Sepsis Bundle in whole was unsatisfactory. This was noticeably apparent especially to fluid resuscitation where it was not delivered as recommended by the Sepsis Bundle.