Agreement among healthcare professionals in ten European countries in diagnosing case-vignettes of surgical-site infections.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_F6593FA765F3
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Agreement among healthcare professionals in ten European countries in diagnosing case-vignettes of surgical-site infections.
Journal
Plos One
Author(s)
Birgand G., Lepelletier D., Baron G., Barrett S., Breier A.C., Buke C., Markovic-Denic L., Gastmeier P., Kluytmans J., Lyytikainen O., Sheridan E., Szilagyi E., Tacconelli E., Troillet N., Ravaud P., Lucet J.C.
ISSN
1932-6203 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1932-6203
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2013
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
8
Number
7
Pages
e68618
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Although surgical-site infection (SSI) rates are advocated as a major evaluation criterion, the reproducibility of SSI diagnosis is unknown. We assessed agreement in diagnosing SSI among specialists involved in SSI surveillance in Europe.
METHODS: Twelve case-vignettes based on suspected SSI were submitted to 100 infection-control physicians (ICPs) and 86 surgeons in 10 European countries. Each participant scored eight randomly-assigned case-vignettes on a secure online relational database. The intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) was used to assess agreement for SSI diagnosis on a 7-point Likert scale and the kappa coefficient to assess agreement for SSI depth on a three-point scale.
RESULTS: Intra-specialty agreement for SSI diagnosis ranged across countries and specialties from 0.00 (95%CI, 0.00-0.35) to 0.65 (0.45-0.82). Inter-specialty agreement varied from 0.04 (0.00-0.62) in to 0.55 (0.37-0.74) in Germany. For all countries pooled, intra-specialty agreement was poor for surgeons (0.24, 0.14-0.42) and good for ICPs (0.41, 0.28-0.61). Reading SSI definitions improved agreement among ICPs (0.57) but not surgeons (0.09). Intra-specialty agreement for SSI depth ranged across countries and specialties from 0.05 (0.00-0.10) to 0.50 (0.45-0.55) and was not improved by reading SSI definition.
CONCLUSION: Among ICPs and surgeons evaluating case-vignettes of suspected SSI, considerable disagreement occurred regarding the diagnosis, with variations across specialties and countries.
Keywords
Clinical Competence, Cross Infection, Europe, Health Personnel, Humans, Physicians, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Surgical Wound Infection/diagnosis
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
27/12/2013 12:29
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:22
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