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Health Care Utilization and Associated Economic Burden of Postoperative Surgical Site Infection after Spinal Surgery with Follow-Up of 24 Months.

Nicholas DietzMayur SharmaShawn AdamsBeatrice UgiliwenezaDengzhi WangMartin F BjurströmIsaac KarikariDoniel DrazinMax Boakye
Published in: Journal of neurological surgery. Part A, Central European neurosurgery (2021)
 SSIs were associated with significant health care utilization payments at 24 months of follow-up. The following clinical and procedural risk factors appear to be predictive of postoperative SSI: depression, diabetes, anemia, two or more levels, tobacco use, trauma, neoplasm, congestive heart failure, instrumentation, renal failure, intravenous drug use, and malnutrition. Interpretation of modifiable and nonmodifiable risk factors for infection informs surgeons of expected postoperative course and preoperative risk for this most common and deleterious postoperative complication to spinal surgery.
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