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CUSP for VAP: EVAP NHSN VAE Surveillance Definition Review

CUSP for VAP: EVAP NHSN VAE Surveillance Definition Review. Call in information Phone #: 800.779.9891 Pass code: 4757941. CUSP for VAP: EVAP NHSN VAE Surveillance Definition Review. Presented by: Kathleen Speck, MPH September 13, 2012 Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality.

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CUSP for VAP: EVAP NHSN VAE Surveillance Definition Review

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  1. CUSP for VAP: EVAPNHSN VAE Surveillance Definition Review Call in information Phone #: 800.779.9891 Pass code: 4757941

  2. CUSP for VAP: EVAPNHSN VAE Surveillance Definition Review Presented by: Kathleen Speck, MPH September 13, 2012 Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  3. Our Collaborators • Karol G. Wicker, MHS Senior Director, Quality Policy & Advocacy Maryland Hospital Association kwicker@mhaonline.org • Mary Catanzaro RN BSMT CIC Project Manager HAIs Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania mcatanzaro@haponline.org

  4. Learning Objectives • To discuss the NHSN VAE definition. • To discuss the linelist generator developed by Dr. Michael Klompas Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  5. NHSN Surveillance 2012-2013 • Assessment must take place for all VAE tiers • VAC - Ventilator-associated Condition • IVAC - Infectious Ventilator-associated Condition • Possible Ventilator-associated Pneumonia • Probable Ventilator-associated Pneumonia Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  6. VAC Definition Criteria8 • Patient intubated for > 2 calendar days • Baseline stability • Baseline: • 2 calendar days immediately preceding the first day of increased daily minimum PEEP or FiO2 requirements • Stability: • ≥ 2 calendar days of stable or decreasing daily minimum FiO2 or PEEP requirements Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  7. Threshold change for VAC • Threshold rise in daily minimum: • PEEP by ≥3 cm H2O or • FiO2 by ≥20 points • sustained ≥2 days Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  8. Example - VAC Stable Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  9. Example – no VAC Unstable Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  10. Example – no VAC Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  11. Subsequent VAEs • VAEs are defined as 14 days • Starts on day 1 of worsening oxygenation • New VAE cannot be reported until 14 day period has elapsed Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  12. VAE Outcomes • VAE = VAC, IVAC, Possible VAP and Probable VAP • VAC = Significant respiratory deterioration after 2 or more days of stability • IVAC = VAC + abnormal temp or WBC + ≥ 4 days of new antibiotics • Possible VAP = IVAC + purulent sputum or positive sputum/BAL culture • Probable VAP = IVAC + purulent sputum AND positive sputum/BAL culture Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  13. Setting Up a Linelist Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  14. Linelist Definitions Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  15. Steps to generate linelist for VAE • Begin with “Daily Linelist” • Enter daily minimum PEEP and FiO2 for every ventilated patient for every calendar day the patient spends any time on a ventilator • Worksheet will automatically flag events that fulfill criteria for VAC • If a patient is not identified as having VAC, don’t collect any further information for that patient. Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  16. Step 1 – VAC Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  17. Determination of IVAC • Patients where VAC has already been determined • Enter: • Tmin and Tmax • WBCmin and WBCmax • QAD – Qualifying antibiotic day • IVAC requires 4 contiguous days of a new antibiotic starting within the 5 days starting 2 days before the onset Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  18. Step 2 - IVAC Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  19. New Antimicrobial AgentQualifying Antimicrobial Day (QAD) • Any agent listed in the Appendix of the Device Associated Events: VAE (pages 10-19 through 10-21) that: • Is initiated on or after the third day of mechanical ventilation AND • is started in the 5 day period defined by • 2 days before • the day of the event • the 2 days after AND • Was not given to the patient on either of the two days preceding the current event Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  20. Qualifying Antibiotic Days - Timing(VAC has already been established) Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  21. Example Antibiotic Worksheet Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  22. Determination of Possible VAP or Probable VAP • Patients where IVAC has been determined • From Sputum of BAL gram stain • Enter • Polys – polys, neutrophils or WBC (semiquantitative scale) • Epis – epithelial cells or squamous cells (semiquantitative scale) • Culture – result • Quantity - threshold (10^5 for endotracheal aspirate, 10^4 for BAL, 10^3 for protected specimen brush). Semi-quantitative equivalent also acceptable. Answer Yes or No. Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  23. Step 3 – Possible VAP or Probable VAP Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

  24. Questions? Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality

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