Measures to Prevent Surgical Site Infections in Neurosurgery: Survey and Comparative Analysis

In a survey-based comparative analysis, Cristina Sánchez‑Viguera et al. from the Hospital Regional Universitario de Málaga, Hospital General de Granollers Published in: Neurocirugia Journal the awareness and real-world uptake of evidence-based surgical site infection prevention measures among Spanish neurosurgeons.

Using a 64-item questionnaire sent to SENEC members, they explored self-reported behaviors related to perioperative infection control.

Findings reflect a mismatch between intention and action: While neurosurgeons express high regard for guidelines, outdated practices persist:

Prolonged surgical antibiotic prophylaxis in Neurosurgery (>24 h)

Insufficient drying time for antiseptics

Routine application of adhesive drapes, despite limited evidence for efficacy

Hair removal by the surgeon (rather than nursing staff)

Low uptake of double-gloving protocols

Rare nutritional screening

Minimal involvement in SSI training or feedback programs 1)

Aspect Evaluation
Population 123 Spanish neurosurgeons — adequate but susceptible to response/selection bias
Survey Design Solid structure, but self-reporting introduces social desirability bias
Evidence–Practice Gap

67 % acknowledge divergence between guideline and practice

Only 37 % use alcohol-based antiseptics

Just 16.7 % double-glove

Only 7.5 % perform nutritional pre-screening

16.5 % participate in SSI training

37.2 % receive feedback on infection rates |

Hair Management 83.3 % perform hair removal themselves — unusual for surgical specialties (p < 0.001)
Statistical Rigor Descriptive + comparative; meaningful within limits of small sample
Key Limitations

Only Spanish SENEC members → limited generalizability

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