Summary Icon
Report Icon
Question Mark Icon

St Francis Medical Center

2620 W Faidley Ave
Grand Island, Nebraska   68803
(308) 384.4600

History of Compliance with Infection Prevention Procedures

Nebraska Flag
United States Icon

Surgery Patients Who Were Given an Antibiotic Within One Hour Before Surgery to Help Prevent Infection

Medium

Giving patients antibiotics right before surgery helps to boost the patient's ability to fight off contamination during surgery that could lead to infection. Studies show that patients given antibiotics either more than one hour before or after the first surgical incision is made experience higher rates of infection compared to those who are given antibiotics within one hour before surgery begins.

The compliance level of hospitals which report a small number of cases (fewer than 25) should not be regarded as reliably predicting performance; these hospitals are displayed in italics and include Note 1. "Patients" is the number of patients for which data was submitted. Re-sort the table by clicking on the table headers.

Reporting PeriodCompliancePatientsNotes
[1] The number of cases is too small (fewer than 25) to reliably tell how well a hospital is performing.
[2] The hospital indicated that the data submitted for this measure were based on a sample of cases.
[3] Data was collected during a shorter time period (fewer quarters) than the maximum possible time for this measure (One quarter equals three months.)
[4] Inaccurate information submitted and suppressed for one or more quarters.
[5] No data is available from the hospital for this measure.
2005_09 - September 200591%329
2005_12 - December 200592%476
2006_03 - March 200693%603
2006_06 - June 200694%594
2006_09 - September 200695%587
2006_12 - December 200694%585
2007_03 - March 200794%602
2007_06 - June 200794%598
2007_09 - September 200795%581
2007_12 - December 200795%556
2008_03 - March 200896%556
2008_06 - June 200896%534
2008_09 - September 200896%512
2008_12 - December 200897%507
2009_03 - March 200997%466
2009_06 - June 200997%449
2009_09 - September 200997%462
Nebraska Flag
United States Icon

Surgery Patients Who Were Given the Right Kind of Antibiotic to Help Prevent Infection

Medium

Choosing the appropriate antibiotic is critical because it must be effective in preventing infections caused by bacteria likely to be present around the surgical site. Antibiotic selection therefore varies depending on the type of surgery. Guidelines for appropriate antibiotic selection have been developed by the CDC.

The compliance level of hospitals which report a small number of cases (fewer than 25) should not be regarded as reliably predicting performance; these hospitals are displayed in italics and include Note 1. "Patients" is the number of patients for which data was submitted. Re-sort the table by clicking on the table headers.

Reporting PeriodCompliancePatientsNotes
[1] The number of cases is too small (fewer than 25) to reliably tell how well a hospital is performing.
[2] The hospital indicated that the data submitted for this measure were based on a sample of cases.
[3] Data was collected during a shorter time period (fewer quarters) than the maximum possible time for this measure (One quarter equals three months.)
[4] Inaccurate information submitted and suppressed for one or more quarters.
[5] No data is available from the hospital for this measure.
2007_06 - June 200796%151
2007_09 - September 200793%295
2007_12 - December 200793%415
2008_03 - March 200892%560
2008_06 - June 200891%540
2008_09 - September 200892%515
2008_12 - December 200893%510
2009_03 - March 200995%469
2009_06 - June 200996%450
2009_09 - September 200996%464
Nebraska Flag
United States Icon

Surgery Patients Whose Preventative Antibiotics were Stopped Within 24 hours After Surgery

Medium

Continuing antibiotics beyond 24 hours after the end of surgery does not offer any additional protection when it comes to preventing infections. But the prolonged use of antibiotics can be associated with other complications and can encourage antibiotic resistance.

The compliance level of hospitals which report a small number of cases (fewer than 25) should not be regarded as reliably predicting performance; these hospitals are displayed in italics and include Note 1. "Patients" is the number of patients for which data was submitted. Re-sort the table by clicking on the table headers.

Reporting PeriodCompliancePatientsNotes
[1] The number of cases is too small (fewer than 25) to reliably tell how well a hospital is performing.
[2] The hospital indicated that the data submitted for this measure were based on a sample of cases.
[3] Data was collected during a shorter time period (fewer quarters) than the maximum possible time for this measure (One quarter equals three months.)
[4] Inaccurate information submitted and suppressed for one or more quarters.
[5] No data is available from the hospital for this measure.
2005_09 - September 200563%320
2005_12 - December 200566%463
2006_03 - March 200666%583
2006_06 - June 200668%570
2006_09 - September 200668%562
2006_12 - December 200668%560
2007_03 - March 200769%579
2007_06 - June 200771%579
2007_09 - September 200771%563
2007_12 - December 200770%537
2008_03 - March 200864%533
2008_06 - June 200857%512
2008_09 - September 200859%492
2008_12 - December 200863%483
2009_03 - March 200972%443
2009_06 - June 200985%417
2009_09 - September 200991%420