Michael Mazzeffi, Marcia P White, Ashley Wade, Jacob Jordan, Akram Zaaqoq, Emily Schneiderman, Tiffany Phillips, Claire Davis, Jolian Dahl, John McNeil, Karen Singh, Joan Buckner, Costi D Sifri
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Central line [catheter]-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) is associated with longer stays and increased cost, morbidity, and mortality.
Local problem: An academic cardiothoracic intensive care unit had a high CLABSI incidence (standardized infection ratio of 2.3 at baseline). The hospital's executive leadership team (chief nursing officer, chief medical officer, and chief of quality and performance improvement) directed intensive care unit leaders to reduce the standardized infection ratio.
Methods: Interprofessional CLABSI reduction efforts were formulated using A3 methods based on the plan-do-check-act cycle. Unit leaders (nurses, physicians, advanced practice providers, and allied health professionals) met every 2 weeks for 2 years to formulate CLABSI reduction efforts. Efficacy of CLABSI reduction was evaluated with the standardized infection ratio.
Interventions: Quality improvement activities included improved hand hygiene compliance, optimization of central venous catheter insertion, improved chlorhexidine dressing adherence, daily assessment of high-risk catheters for removal, use of an electronic intensive care unit bundle checklist to highlight central venous catheter duration for clinicians, and promotion of a blood culturing stewardship program with guidance on when to obtain blood samples for culture.
Results: Interprofessional CLABSI reduction efforts reduced the standardized infection ratio from 2.3 to 0.8 over 3 years. The standardized utilization ratio, reflecting observed to expected central venous catheter days, decreased from 1.0 to 0.89.
Conclusion: Interprofessional CLABSI reduction efforts can be effective in a cardiac surgical intensive care unit and improve patient safety. Keys to success include teamwork, accountability, acceptance from intensive care unit staff, and support from hospital executive leaders.
期刊介绍:
Critical Care Nurse (CCN) is an official publication of the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN). Authors are invited to submit manuscripts for consideration and peer review. Clinical topics must meet the mission of CCN and address nursing practice of acute and critically ill patients.