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Evidence-Based Strategies to Tackle the Three Most Common Sources of HAIs: Contaminated Hands, Environmental Surfaces, and Skin Cindy Winfrey, MSN, RN, CIC Senior Medical Science Liaison PDI Healthcare. Financial Disclosures. PDI Healthcare-Employee. Objectives.
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Evidence-Based Strategies to Tackle the Three Most Common Sources of HAIs: Contaminated Hands, Environmental Surfaces, and SkinCindy Winfrey, MSN, RN, CICSenior Medical Science LiaisonPDI Healthcare
Financial Disclosures PDI Healthcare-Employee
Objectives • Discuss the impact of contaminated environmental surfaces, hands (of both patients and healthcare providers), and skin in the transmission of Healthcare Associated Infection • Review the current research gaps for pediatric Infection Prevention literature • Discuss strategies to meet and exceed Joint Commission NPSG 7 • Discuss patient and family involvement and empowerment strategies to reduce the incidence of HAIs
Examples of multidrug resistance in HAI pathogens • Acinetobacterbaumannii • About 75% are multidrug resistant* • 10% increase from 2000 • Pseudomonas aeruginosa • About 17% are multidrug resistant* • Staphylococcus aureus • MRSA causes about 55% of HAIs (Antimicrobial-Resistant Pathogens Associated with Healthcare Associated Infections, Annual Summary of Data Reported to the NHSN at CDC, 2006-2007) * Percent Acinetobacterbaumanniiand P. aeruginosa in ICUs that are multidrug-resistant, NNIS and NHSN, 2000-2008. Includes ICUs only (MICU, SICU, MSICU) and device-related infections only (CLABSI, CAUTI, VAP).
Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAIs) • 1 out of 20 hospitalized patients affected • Associated with increased mortality • Attributed costs: $26-33 billion annually • HAIs occur in all types of facilities, including: • Long-term care facilities • Dialysis facilities • Ambulatory surgical centers • Hospitals
Outbreaks vs. Endemic Problems • Endemic problems represent the majority of HAIs • Device-associated infections • Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI) • Central line-associated Blood stream infections (CLABSI) • Ventilator-associated Pneumonia (VAP) • Procedure-associated infections • Surgical site infections (SSI) • Adherence problems • Antimicrobial stewardship • Hand hygiene • Isolation precautions
Changing Landscape of Healthcare • Growing populations at risk • Immunocompromised individuals • Low birthweight, premature neonates • Transplant recipients on immunosuppressive therapy • Special environments • Intensive care and burn units • Infusion services
HHS Action Plan 5-year Goals NHSN – CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network EIP – CDC’s Emerging Infections Program NHDS – CDC’s National Hospital Discharge Survey SCIP – CMS’s Surgical Care Improvement Project HCUP – AHRQ’s Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project
Impact of Neonatal CLABSI Inherent risk with CVCs Difficult to identify and treat Prolonged & often frequent exposure to antibiotics Major contributor of morbidity and mortality Increased length of stay and hospital costs Infants are especially vulnerable
Challenges to Skin Antisepsis:Evidence-Based Approaches Prepping the skin • Chlorhexidine (CHG) vs Alcohol vsPovidone-Iodine • CHG shown to be more effective due to residual effect. • CHG/alcohol solutions: 0.5% to 3.15% CHG • CHG/aqueous solutions: 0.5% to 4% • CHG recommended by the CDC Guideline for all but < 2 months • But, in <1000 gms, CHG associated with skin irritation • Andersen J Hosp Infect 2005 (2% CHG/aqueous) • Garland Pediatr Infect Dis J 1996 (2% CHG/alcohol) • CHG studies currently being conducted for safety in neonates • 61% of US NICU Medical Fellowship Directors reported using CHG • Tamma ICHE, 2010 NICU compromise
Skin Antiseptic Agents • Choice varies with age • Population based complications • < 2 months • EGA • Post natal age • Agents • 2 to 3.15% CHG - alcoholic formulation • CHG - aqueous formulation • Povidoneiodine • Removal considerations • Normal Saline • Sterile Water
Survey of Neonatal CHG Use • Survey of Neonatology Fellowship Directors in the United States • 61% reported use of CHG for skin antisepsis for neonates • 51% limited use on basis of birth weight, gestational age or chronological age. • Skin reactions (erythema, erosions, burns) occurring primarily in those weighing <1500 grams were reported by 51%. • No difference in adverse events between the alcoholic or aqueous CHG preparations Tamma, Aucott, & Milstone, 2010
Primary Skin Disinfectant Used for Most PICC Insertions Insertions Sharpe & Pettit 2009
Best Practices for Disinfection of Non-Critical Items Examples include surfaces in the environment and medical equipment used in patient care
State of prevention knowledge and science • Guidelines developed for each type of infection and based on systematic reviews of medical literature • Prevention of central line-associated blood stream infections • Prevention of catheter-associated urinary tract infections • Prevention of surgical site infections • Prevention of healthcare-associated pneumonia • Management of multidrug-resistant organisms • Recommendations graded according to evidence • Guidelines contain many recommendations • Current efforts to help prioritize interventions that are most effective
Adherence to infection control guidelines is incomplete • Many HAIs are preventable with current recommendations • Failure to use proven interventions is unacceptable • Only 30%-38% of U.S. hospitals are in full compliance • Just 40% of healthcare personnel adhere to hand hygiene • Insufficient infection control infrastructure in non-acute care settings has allowed major lapses in safe care
Local success fuels national prevention National Regional Facility Unit
National CDC knowledge and data fuels local to national CLABSI prevention • Nationalexpansion of CLABSI prevention • 60% Reduction in CLABSI between 1999-2009 • State-based public reporting using NHSN • State/regional prevention collaboratives (CUSP, Recovery Act projects) • CMS/IPPS – hospitals report CLABSIs for full Medicare payment Regional • Subsequent projects based upon CDC prevention: • Michigan Keystone • Institute for Healthcare Improvement • Others Facility Unit Outbreak Investigations Pittsburgh Regional Healthcare Initiative First successful, large-scale CLABSI prevention demonstration project NHSN Data CDC Guidelines Prevention Research (e.g. chlorhexidine bathing) Inputs Outputs
The need for HAI prevention research Prevented • Need for complete implementation of practices known to prevent HAIs Preventable Healthcare-associated Infection • Need for ongoing research to identify new strategies to prevent the remaining HAIs Prevention Approach Unknown
Prevention Hand hygiene No touch technique Dressing Skin antisepsis Injection cap/needleless connector
Consumers Medical Professionals Public Health Safe Healthcare is Everyone’s Responsibility Patients Payors Government Healthcare Facilities
Hypothetical ? If you knew………………………. That you could do something simple, easy, cost effective, and that was Evidence-Based, but took a little extra time….. Would you do it?????
Questions • Whose Infection will you prevent when you return to your institution? • Contact Information: • Email: cwinfrey@pdipdi.com • Phone: 719-306-2616