| 03 Novembre 2016
 3 November 2016 (Geneva) – People preparing for surgery should always  have a bath or shower but not be shaved, and antibiotics should only be  used to prevent infections before and during surgery,  not afterwards, according to new guidelines from the World Health  Organization (WHO) that aim to save lives, cut costs and arrest the  spread of superbugs.
3 November 2016 (Geneva) – People preparing for surgery should always  have a bath or shower but not be shaved, and antibiotics should only be  used to prevent infections before and during surgery,  not afterwards, according to new guidelines from the World Health  Organization (WHO) that aim to save lives, cut costs and arrest the  spread of superbugs. 
The Global Guidelines for the Prevention of Surgical Site Infection  includes a list of 29 concrete recommendations distilled by 20 of the  world’s leading experts from 26 reviews of the latest evidence. The  recommendations were also published today in The Lancet Infectious Diseases and  are designed to address the increasing burden of health care-associated  infections on both patients and health care systems globally.
 
 “No one should get sick while seeking or receiving care,” said Dr  Marie-Paule Kieny, WHO’s Assistant Director-General for Health Systems  and Innovation. “Preventing surgical infections has never been more  important but it is complex and requires a range of preventive measures.  These guidelines are an invaluable tool for protecting patients.”
 
 Surgical site infections are caused by bacteria that get in through  incisions made during surgery. They threaten the lives of millions of  patients each year and contribute to the spread of antibiotic  resistance. In low- and middle-income countries, 11% of patients who  undergo surgery are infected in the process. In Africa, up to 20% of  women who have a caesarean section contract a wound infection,  compromising their own health and their ability to care for their  babies.
 
 But surgical site infections are not just a problem for poor countries.  In the United States, they contribute to patients spending more than  400,000 extra days in hospital at a cost of an additional US$900 million  per year.
 
 Preventing infections before, during and after surgery
 
 The guidelines include 13 recommendations for the period before surgery,  and 16 for preventing infections during and after surgery. They range  from simple precautions such as ensuring that patients bathe or shower  before surgery and the best way for surgical teams to clean their hands,  to guidance on when to use antibiotics to prevent infections, what  disinfectants to use before incision, and which sutures to use.
 
 “Sooner or later many of us will need surgery, but none of us wants to  pick up an infection on the operating table,” said Dr Ed Kelley,  Director of WHO’s Department of Service Delivery and Safety. “By  applying these new guidelines surgical teams can reduce harm, improve  quality of life, and do their bit to stop the spread of antibiotic  resistance. We also recommend that patients preparing for surgery ask  their surgeon whether they are following WHO’s advice.”
 
 No international evidence-based guidelines had previously been available  and there are inconsistencies in the interpretation of evidence and  recommendations in existing national guidelines. The new WHO guidelines  are valid for any country and suitable to local adaptations, and take  account of the strength of available scientific evidence, the cost and  resource implications, and patient values and preferences. They  complement WHO’s popular Surgical Safety Checklist, which gives a broad  range of safety measures, by giving more detailed recommendations on  preventing infections.
 
 Halting the spread of antibiotic resistance
 
 Importantly, the guidelines recommend that antibiotics be used to  prevent infections before and during surgery only, a crucial measure in  stopping the spread of antibiotic resistance. Antibiotics should not be  used after surgery, as is often done.
 
 Antibiotics are medicines used to prevent and treat bacterial  infections. Antibiotic resistance occurs when bacteria change in  response to the use of these medicines. Resistance develops naturally  over time, but misuse of antibiotics in humans and animals is rapidly  accelerating the process.
 
 Antibiotic resistance is putting the achievements of modern medicine at  risk. Without effective antibiotics for the prevention and treatment of  infections, organ transplants, cancer chemotherapy and surgeries such as  caesarean sections and hip replacements become much more dangerous.  This leads to longer hospital stays, higher medical costs and increased  mortality.
 
 Many studies show that implementing a range of preventive measures  significantly reduces harm from surgical site infections. A pilot study  in four African countries showed that implementing a selection of the  new recommendations could result in a 39% reduction in surgical site  infections. Building upon these successful examples, WHO is developing a  guide and toolkit that will help national and local authorities to put  the recommendations into action.









