P Paul Chandanabhumma, Sriram Swaminathan, Lourdes M Cabrera, Shiwei Zhou, Carol E Chenoweth, Hechuan Hou, Sarah Comstock, Preeti N Malani, Keith D Aaronson, Francis D Pagani, Donald S Likosky
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Infections following durable left ventricular assist device (dLVAD) implantation are common and associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Despite documented interhospital variability, few studies have identified strategies to mitigate their occurrence. This national study uses a multistage mixed methods design to develop a customizable and deployable toolkit of expert-guided recommendations to reduce infections post-dLVAD.
Methods: Using purposeful sampling, participants (eg, clinical and operational ventricular assist device [VAD] team members) from low, medium, and high-performance hospitals (based on their risk-adjusted, 90-day post-implantation infection rates) across the United States were interviewed to assess factors contributing to postdLVAD infections. Draft toolkit recommendations were iteratively developed after integrating thematically analyzed qualitative and quantitative data from a merged national registry with Medicare and hospital survey data. A national advisory team of VAD subject matter experts provided mixed methods input to refine the toolkit's content and structure.
Results: Seventy-three clinical and operational VAD team members across 8 US hospitals were interviewed, spanning low (n=4), medium (n=1) and high (n=3) performance groups. Fourteen subject matter experts provided stakeholder feedback to refine the toolkit. The resulting toolkit contains 39 infection prevention recommendations that address VAD program care processes (eg, real-time provider communication), clinicians (eg, multidisciplinary protocol development), patients and caregivers (eg, engaging patient advisors in patient education), and VAD leadership (eg, unit and service level data reporting). Accompanying resources (eg, team-based exercises, data collection worksheets) support implementing and evaluating site-specific strategies.
Conclusions: Using mixed methods approaches, an infection prevention toolkit was developed to enhance care coordination among VAD team members and mitigate postdLVAD infections. Future work should evaluate the effectiveness of implementing this infection prevention toolkit within the dLVAD setting.
期刊介绍:
Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, an American Heart Association journal, publishes articles related to improving cardiovascular health and health care. Content includes original research, reviews, and case studies relevant to clinical decision-making and healthcare policy. The online-only journal is dedicated to furthering the mission of promoting safe, effective, efficient, equitable, timely, and patient-centered care. Through its articles and contributions, the journal equips you with the knowledge you need to improve clinical care and population health, and allows you to engage in scholarly activities of consequence to the health of the public. Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes considers the following types of articles: Original Research Articles, Data Reports, Methods Papers, Cardiovascular Perspectives, Care Innovations, Novel Statistical Methods, Policy Briefs, Data Visualizations, and Caregiver or Patient Viewpoints.