Caesarean section wound infections and antibiotic use: a retrospective case-series in a tertiary referral hospital in The Gambia.

Alex Aulakh; Patrick Idoko; Suzanne T Anderson; Wendy Graham ORCID logo; (2017) Caesarean section wound infections and antibiotic use: a retrospective case-series in a tertiary referral hospital in The Gambia. Tropical doctor, 48 (3). pp. 192-199. ISSN 0049-4755 DOI: 10.1177/0049475517739539
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Ours is the first published study to examine post-Caesarean section (CS) wound infections in The Gambia. We explored risk factors and clinical management retrospectively at a large referral hospital over a 12-month period. A total of 777 cases were identified and records for 682 (88%) were retrieved. The CS rate was 21.8% and the wound infection rate 13.2%. Risk factors included: length of labour; decision-to-incision time and stillbirth. Only 7.4% of women received preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis, but all women received multiple-dose, postoperative antibiotics. The wound infection rate found is likely to be an underestimate owing to loss to follow-up. The adherence to international guidelines regarding preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis needs to be improved.

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