dc.description.abstract | Surgical site infection (SSI) is a microbial infection of the surgical wound within 30
days of operation or one year after surgery if an implant is placed in a patient. The incidence
level of postoperative orthopedic SSI range to 71%. An increase in antibiotic-resistant bacteria
causes the treatment of postoperative orthopedic surgical wound infections to be less effective,
so there is an increase in morbidity, mortality, length of stay, and economic burden on hospital
resources. Antibiogram were used to guide the clinician and pharmacist selected the best
empiric antimicrobial treatment in the event of pending microbiology culture and susceptibility
results to overcome the disadvantages of antibotic-resistant bacteria. This study aimed to form
a postoperative orthopedic SSI antibiogram of dr. Soebandi Hospital in Jember City, East Java,
Indonesia which can be used as a reference to rational therapy. This study used a descriptive
observational study research design with medical records from January – December 2019. A
total of 34 isolates were found from 33 patients who did a culture examination. Of the 34
isolates, 25 were found to be positive for bacterial growth, while nine were negative. Twentytwo bacteria were Gram-negative and others were Gram-positive. The bacteria were tested
against beta-lactam and non-beta lactam antibiotics. From antibiogram, showed that Gramnegative bacteria sensitive to the meropenem and resistant to cefotaxime. While, gram-positive
bacteria showed sensitivity to doxycycline and resistant to erythromycin and penicillin. | en_US |