Chart — Perioperative Nursing
Surgical Wound Classes
CDC/National Research Council surgical wound classification — four classes defined by degree of contamination and predicted infection risk. Classification is determined intraoperatively by the surgeon and drives antibiotic selection, wound closure method, and postoperative monitoring intensity.
Educational use only. SSI risk rates are population-level estimates. Individual patient risk varies based on comorbidities, procedure duration, surgeon technique, and institutional infection control practices. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
| Class | SSI Risk | Definition | Examples | Closure | Nursing Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Class IClean | 1–2% | No hollow viscus entered. No inflammation. No break in sterile technique. Respiratory, alimentary, genital, and urinary tracts not entered. |
| Primary (immediate closure) |
|
Class IIClean-Contaminated | 2–10% | Hollow viscus entered under CONTROLLED conditions. No unusual contamination. Includes biliary, GI, GU, and respiratory tracts entered without significant spillage. |
| Primary (immediate closure) |
|
Class IIIContaminated | 10–15% | Open/fresh traumatic wounds, acute non-purulent inflammation, or major break in sterile technique. Gross GI spillage or entry without bowel prep included. |
| Delayed primary or open packing |
|
Class IVDirty / Infected | >15% (up to 40%) | Existing clinical infection or perforated viscera at time of surgery. Organisms causing postoperative infection were present before operation. Old traumatic wounds with devitalized tissue. |
| Open — negative pressure wound therapy or delayed closure |
|
Class I
Clean
1–2%
SSI risk
Class II
Clean-Contaminated
2–10%
SSI risk
Class III
Contaminated
10–15%
SSI risk
Class IV
Dirty/Infected
>15%
SSI risk
NCLEX Quick Reference — Wound Classification
No hollow viscus entered, no inflammation
Class I — Clean (1–2%)
Bowel entered in controlled manner, no spillage
Class II — Clean-Contaminated (2–10%)
Major break in sterile technique OR gross GI spillage
Class III — Contaminated (10–15%)
Existing infection or perforated viscera at time of surgery
Class IV — Dirty/Infected (>15%)
Antibiotic prophylaxis: administer within _____ of incision
60 minutes (120 min for vanco/fluoroquinolone)
Hair removal method before surgery
Clippers ONLY — never razor (micro-abrasions increase SSI risk)
Wound left open for packing — which class?
Class III or IV (contaminated/dirty wounds)
Antibiotics are THERAPEUTIC (not just prophylactic) — which class?
Class IV — Dirty/Infected
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with CDC/National Research Council Wound Classification; AORN Surgical Standards; SCIP Core Measures. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
