factors determining success in reduction of central line associated blood stream infection (clabsi)...
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Factors determining success in reduction of Central Line Associated Blood Stream Infection (CLABSI) on statewide
levelsHeeWon Lee, Doris Duke Clinical Research
FellowPI Peter Pronovost, M.D. PhD.,
Bradford Winters, M.D. PhD.
BackgroundCLABSI
• A common, costly, and fatal cause of hospital-related deaths, with approximately 31,000 annual deaths in the US
• $3 billion spent worldwide.1
• However, CLABSIs are preventable.2,3
1. Klevens RM, Edwards JR, Richards CL Jr, et al. Estimating health care-associated infections and deaths in US hospitals, 2002. Public Health Rep. 2007; 122(2):160-166.
2. Edwards JR, Peterson KD, Mu Y, et al. National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) report: data summary for 2006 through 2008, issued December 2009. Am J Infect Control. 2009;37(10):783-805.
3. Berenholtz SM, Pronovost PJ, Lipsett PA, et al. Eliminating catheter-related blood stream infections in the intensive care unit. Crit Care Med. 2004;32(10):2014-2020.
BackgroundOn the CUSP: Stop BSI
• Project led by the Johns Hopkins Quality Safety Research Group
• Implementing a two-component, multifaceted hospital safety program has– Saved lives, health care $– Reduced CLABSIs by 66%– Sustained a median infection rate of 0, and mean of 1 infection per 1000 catheter-days for more than 3 years in Michigan.4
4. Pronovost PJ, Goeschel CA, Colantuoni E, et al. Sustaining reductions in catheter relate bloodstrea infections in Michigan intensive care units: observational study BMJ. 2010;240:c309.
Background On the CUSP: Stop BSI
Timeline
Hospital recruitment, registration, orientation with QSRG on CUSP
Month 3 Month 28Month 0
Implementation of program:
1. Evidence-based Behaviors to Prevent CLABSI
2. Multifaceted Safety Program
1. Continued contact with QSRG
2. Data collection--submission of monthly CLABSI and monthly team checkup tool data
BackgroundBackgroundOn the CUSP: Stop BSIOn the CUSP: Stop BSI I. Evidence-based Behaviors to Prevent CLABSII. Evidence-based Behaviors to Prevent CLABSI55
1. Remove Unnecessary Lines
2. Wash Hands Prior to Procedure
3. Use Maximal Barrier Precautions
4. Clean Skin with Chlorhexidine
5. Avoid Femoral Lines5. Marschall et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2008. CDC.gov
BackgroundBackgroundOn the CUSP: Stop BSIOn the CUSP: Stop BSI
II. Multifaceted Safety Program (Team II. Multifaceted Safety Program (Team Checkup Toolkit)Checkup Toolkit)55
1. Learning from Defects2. Daily Goals Checklist3. Morning Briefing4. Observing Rounds5. Shadowing Another Profession6. Culture Debriefing7. Physician Call List
“When we all work together, we all win together”
BackgroundExpansion of Stop BSI
Project
Overall goal: 75% national reduction in CLABSI over 3 years
But wait! Problems exist…
• Despite the expansion of the program to numerous states…– Median rates of CLABSI remain high or unchanged
– Some hospitals claim to use the checklist, despite having high or unknown infection rates
– Some hospitals say that the ICU patients are too sick and that infection is inevitable
– Hospital enrollment in the program has been slow.6
6. Department of Health and Human Services. Department of Health and Human Services initiative http://www/jjs/gpv/ Accessed July 1, 2010.
What factors are associated with
success of reducing CLABSIs?
Hypothesis
States with higher rates of meeting the CLABSI reduction goals are associated with greater hospital participation and adherence to the two-component, multifaceted safety program.
CLABSI definitionCLABSI definition77
• For determining CLABSI rate– Numerator: # of CLABSIs– Denominator: # of central line-days
– Expressed as a rate of X CLABSI/1,000 central line days•#CLABSI/# central line days X 1000
7. National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN): Device-Associated (DA) Module www.cdc.gov/nhsn/psc_da.html. Accessed July 1, 2010.
Study Design Prospective
observational cohort study
Hospital recruitment, registration, orientation with QSRG on CUSP
Month 31o outcome:
Reduction of CLABSI from baseline rate in the first 3 months of participation
Month 28
2o outcome:
Sustained reduction of CLABSI from baseline rate after 28 months of initiation of project
Month 0
Baseline CLABSI rate
1. Continued contact with QSRG: hospital participation and dropout rates
2. Data collection--submission of monthly CLABSI and monthly team checkup tool data
StratificationHospitals by…• Teaching status• Bed size• Presence in a state with mandatory
participation in the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
States by…• Number of teaching/academic
institutions present• Presence of mandate to report
Statistical methods1. Two sample Wilcoxon rank-sum
test for comparison of medians with baseline CLABSI rates
2. Poisson regression modeling for comparison of CLABSI rates before, during, and up to 3 and 28 months after implementation of program
Limitations of study
• Observational study• Confounders? • Inconsistent data from individual hospitals regarding use of multifaceted toolkit
Implications of study• CLABSI are preventable!
– On the CUSP: Stop BSI project has demonstrated effective elimination of CLABSI on a statewide level in Michigan
• Many states are participating, but CLABSIs still exist
• Study is the first of its kind in examining all participating states and CLABSI rates
• By identifying factors associated with success in reducing CLABSI, we may be better able to reach the goal of reducing and eventually eliminating CLABSI, further helping save lives and healthcare $
Acknowledgements
• Small group leaders:– Dr. Vered Stearns, Dr. Pete Miller
• Small group members:– James Chen, Hormuz Dasenbrock, Andrew Ibrahim, Kevin Jeng, Yong Suh
• Research mentors:– Dr. Bradford Winters, Dr. Peter Pronovost
• QSRG team members