PREVALENCE AND DETERMINANT FACTORS OF HOSPITAL ACQUIRED PNEUMONIA IN POST OPERATIVE ADULT SURGICAL PATIENTS AT SPHMMC PREPARED
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Hospital acquired pneumonia is an inflammatory condition of the lung parenchyma that develops
48-72hours after hospital admission. Despite advances on surgical and anesthetic technique it
persists as a frequent postoperative complication which is associated with significant morbidity
and mortality.
OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
The aim of the research is to know prevalence and to identify modifiable and non modifiable risk
factors of Hospital acquired pneumonia in post-operative adult surgical patients.
METHODS:
This was Hospital based Cross-sectional study for patients who were admitted and operated at
SPHMMC. Secondary data were collected by reviewing patients’ medical records with the aid of
pretested structured checklist. The collected data cleaned, edited, entered and analayzed with
Statistical Product and Service Solutions SPSS Statistics v. 23. Statistical test chi square at 0.05
level of significance was used to assess the significance of association between variables. A Pvalue
< 0.05 was considered statistically significant. To identify the prevalence and potential risk
factors for HAP, we performed a multivariable Binary logistic regression analysis.
RESULTS:
339 patients charts who fulfilled the inclusion criteria were revised .out of which 89(26.3%)
developed hospital acquired pneumonia. Among patients who developed HAP; male to female
ratio was 1:1.06 and 95.5% of patients were operated under general anesthesia.
Being diabetic (AOR=11.23(1.61;78.22)),patients with repeated
surgeries(AOR=20.59(1.17;361.60)), emergency surgeries(AOR=18.71(3.00;116.14)),patients
above ASA class1(AOR=35.38(5.59;223.75)), age above
55yrs(AOR=36.28(6.60;199.32)),durations of surgeries above
2:30hrs(A0R=483.05(40.12;5814.77)) were independently associated with HAP.
CONCLUSION:
This study shown us the burden of postoperative HAP at SPHMMC was high. We retrospectively derived
six determinant factors for developing post operative HAP. Detailed history, physical examination and
investigation must be done preoperatively. Limiting duration of surgery particularly for emergency cases
can decrease occurrence of HAP