African
Journals OnLine
East African Medical Journal
Volume 80 No.5 May 2003
ABSTRACTS
Accidental injuries and cutaneous
contaminations during general surgical operations in a Nigerian teaching
hospital
A.R.K.
Adesunkanmi, MBBS (IB.), FMCS, FWCS, FWACS, FICS, T.A. Badmus, FWACS, and
J.O.D. Ogunlusi, MBChB
Department of
Surgery, College of Health Sciences, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife,
Nigeria
Request for
reprints to: Dr. A.R.K. Adesunkanmi, Department of Surgery, College of Health
Sciences, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria
Abstract
Objective: To determine the
prevalence of accidental injuries and body contaminations among the operating
personnel during general surgical operation, those involved, the circumstances
surrounding the injuries or body contaminations and the factors affecting the
prevalence in a unit of a teaching hospital in Nigeria.
Design: Patients operated
for general surgical conditions in a unit of a Teaching Hospital Complex during
a period of two years (1997-1998) were studied. A proforma was designed to
enter personal biodata, preoperative and intra-postoperative clinical
information of all the patients.
Setting: Wesley Guild
Hospital a unit of teaching hospital complex serving the large agrarian rural
and semi-urban Nigerians.
Patients: Five hundred and
eighty nine consecutive general surgical patients. All types of general
surgical operations were included, emergency or elective, major or minor,
carried out during the day or at night.
Intervention: All the patients
were operated and operating personnel observed for sharp injuries and body
contamination.
Main outcome
measures: Incidence of sharp injuries and cutaneous contamination and personnel
at risk determined.
Results: Operating
personnel sustained 62 sharp injuries (10.5%), these were caused by suture
needle in 57 cases (92.0%), towel clips in three (4.8%), knife cut in two
(3.2%). Operating physicians sustained 56 cases of sharp injuries (90.3%) and
Scrub Nurses in six (9.7%). Self-inflicted sharp injuries in 49 (79%) and in 12
cases (21%) injuries were inflicted by the surgeons or their assistants. Left
hand was injured in 39 cases (63%) and right in 23 (37%). Cutaneous or mucosa
membrane contamination with blood or body fluid occurred in 232 cases (39.4%).
These were made up of wet gown contamination in 124(53.5%), glove failure in
72(31%) and splashing of blood or fluids into the face or eyes in 36 cases
(15.5%). Contamination occurred in more than one operating personnel in more
than half of the cases. Operating surgeons were affected in 211 cases (91%).
The risks of accidental injuries and blood and body fluid contamination were
significant, if the duration of the operation was more than one hour, among the
operating surgeons and if the operation was major (p<0.05).
Conclusion: This study has
demonstrated that cutaneous, percutaneous, and mucous membrane exposure to
patients blood and body fluids are common events during general surgical
operations. Most accidental injuries were due to solid suture needle-sticks,
mostly injured personnel were the primary operating surgeons, injuries occurred
predominantly on the left hand. This may poses a significant risk of infection
with blood borne pathogens when operating on infected patients.
Socio-demographic
factors of pupils who use tobacco in randomly-selected primary schools in
Nairobi Province, Kenya
A.E.O. Ogwell‚Oral and Craniofacial
Research Associates‚ P.O. Box 67427, 00200‚ Nairobi‚ Kenya. BDS, MPH, MPhil,
A.N. Aström‚ BDS, PhD, Oral and Craniofacial Centre for International Health
and O. Haugejorden‚ BDS, PhD, Faculty of Dentistry‚ University of Bergen‚
Norway
Request for
reprints to: Dr. A.E.O. Ogwell‚ Oral and Craniofacial Research Associates‚ P.O.
Box 67427 00200‚ Nairobi‚ Kenya
Abstract
Objective: To report the
prevalence and socio-economic correlates of tobacco use among primary school
pupils in Nairobi‚ Kenya.
Design: |