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Background. Current Practice Survey. Catheter-associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI). Single most common healthcare-associated infection (HAI), accounting for 34% of all HAIs.Associated with significant morbidity and excess healthcare costs.Since 2008, CMS no longer reimburses for additional c
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1. Indwelling Urinary Catheter Management and CA-UTI Prevention in NICHE Hospitals Heidi Wald, MD, MSPH; Regina Fink, PhD, RN, AOCN, FAAN; Heather Gilmartin, MSN, RN, CIC; Angela Richard, MS, RN; Marie Boltz, PhD, RN, GNP-BC; Elizabeth Capezuti, PhD, RN, FAAN
2. Background Current Practice Survey
3. Catheter-associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI) Single most common healthcare-associated infection (HAI), accounting for 34% of all HAIs.
Associated with significant morbidity and excess healthcare costs.
Since 2008, CMS no longer reimburses for additional costs required to treat CAUTIs.
4. CDC Surveillance Definition of CAUTI A urinary tract infection that occurs while a patient has an indwelling urinary catheter or within 48 hours of its removal.
5. Evidence-Based Guidelines Since 2008, multiple evidence-based guidelines for CAUTI prevention have been published
6. Evaluation of Practice is Key! In light of these rapid changes in the field, the review of practices, policies, procedures, and product use is imperative for all healthcare facilities.
7. Objectives To understand the current state of nursing practice in NICHE hospitals with regard to bladder management, indwelling urinary catheter care, and surveillance
8. Methods Current Practice Survey
9. Survey Methodology Sample: All NICHE Hospitals (n=250)
Mechanism: Email survey using Survey Monkey sent to NICHE coordinators. Survey open for 1 month with two email reminders sent.
Stage 1: Dec, 2009: All potential STOP CAUTI Workgroup sites
Stage 2: June, 2010: All remaining NICHE sites
10. Survey Topics based on Review of Published Guidelines Areas of interest:
Equipment
Insertion and maintenance techniques
Training, education, and policies
Documentation, surveillance, and reminders
11. Results Current Practice Survey
12. Characteristics of Hospitals Responding to Survey
14. RESULTS: Equipment Current Practice Survey
15. In which populations does your hospital use the following indwelling catheter types?
16. What does the Evidence say about Catheter Materials? Antimicrobial catheter materials (versus standard materials) for short-term catheterization:
reduce catheter-associated bacteriuria
unproven for reduction of symptomatic CAUTI
do not substitute for a comprehensive CAUTI prevention program.
No clear benefit among standard materials on CAUTI rates including:
latex, hydrogel-coated latex, silicone-coated latex, or all-silicone catheter
17. How often are these alternatives or adjuncts to indwelling catheters used at your hospital?
18. How often does access to the following equipment limit its use at your hospital?
19. Do You Know the Evidence for IUC Alternatives? Condom catheters use reduces CAUTIs and increases patient comfort
Straight catheter use reduces CAUTIs because of reduced late infections
Bladder scanners use reduces IUC use
Securement reduces friction on urinary tract structures
20. RESULTS: Insertion and Maintenance Techniques Current Practice Survey
21. How often are each of the following used when placing an indwelling catheter?
22. How often are each of the following used when placing an indwelling catheter?
23. Recommended: Aseptic Technique During Insertion Aseptic technique:
Donning sterile gloves
Use of sterile barrier
Perineal washing using an antiseptic solution
No-touch insertion
Opening and using a sterile insertion kit
24. When an indwelling catheter is in place, urethral meatus care is performed: How often? With what agents?
25. RESULTS Training, Education, and Policies Current Practice Survey
26. Does your hospital have a policy/procedure on indwelling urinary catheter placement, management, and/or prevention of CAUTI? Among a subset of policies reviewed:
40% were > 2 years old
25% used Lippincott or Delmars texts
Evidence-based
Ranged - 1994-2009
27. Policy and Procedure Components Appropriate catheter indication (50%)
CAUTI S&S assessment parameters (20%)
Bladder scanner parameters (20%)
Insertion technique parameters were discussed but varied by hospital
Sterile closed system reinforced (70%)
Urine specimen procedure outlined (65%)
Lack of discussion
Emptying urinary bag (50%)
Meatal care frequency and agent used (50%)
28. Who is responsible for insertion of indwelling urinary catheters?
29. Training and Validation Annual validation on aseptic technique occurs at ~47% of hospitals
30. CDC Education Recommendations Ensure that only properly trained persons who know the correct technique of aseptic catheter insertion and maintenance are given this responsibility. (Category IB)
Ensure that healthcare personnel who take care of catheters are given periodic training regarding techniques and procedures for insertion, maintenance and removal. Includes: CAUTI, other complications of catheters, alternatives. (Category 1B)
31. Provision of Patient/Family Educational Materials Type of material
Micromedex Notes
Discharge Instructions
Self-cath instruction
S&S infection
Care and maintenance
32. RESULTS Documentation and Surveillance Current Practice Survey
33. How is urinary output and catheter care management documented on your primary unit?
34. Which of the following aspects of urinary output and catheter care management are routinely documented on your primary unit?
35. CDC Documentation Recommendations Consider documenting the following: indication, date and time of insertion, who inserted, date and time of removal (Category II)
Ensure that documentation is accessible and in standard format. Searchable electronic documentation is preferable. (Category II)
36. Does your hospital have a system to remind providers to remove indwelling catheters? Nurse driven protocol to discontinue (40%)
Paper reminders (36%)
Electronic reminders (37%)
Nurse led catheter rounds (35%)
Other
Stickers on MD orders and medical records
ICUs have prompt on daily goal sheet
Electronic Stop Orders
37. Recommended strategies for reducing catheter use and duration (Category 1B) System of alerts or reminders
Guidelines and protocols for nurse-directed removal
Education and performance feedback
Guidelines for perioperative use
Protocols for management of postoperative urinary retention
38. Do your infection practitioners perform routine surveillance for CAUTIs? Where is surveillance conducted?
House-wide (64%)
ICU only (13%)
Did not answer or did not know (13%)
NA (9%)
Catheter days are collected
All units (51%)
Selected units (35%)
Not done (14%)
39. CDC Surveillance Recommendations Consider surveillance for CAUTI when indicated by facility-based risk assessment. (Category II)
Use standardized methodology for performing CAUTI surveillance (includes measures of catheter-days) (Category 1B)
Routine screening of catheterized patients for asymptomatic bacteriuria is not recommended (Category II)
Consider providing regular feedback of unit-specific CAUTI rates to nursing staff. (Category II)
40. Summary NICHE hospitals are implementing many evidence-based CAUTI strategies
Evidence-based insertion and maintenance
CAUTI education
CAUTI QI projects
NICHE hospitals can improve upon
Use of stop orders and reminders
Use of alternatives to IUCs
Documentation and surveillance
41. Implications for CAUTI Prevention in NICHE hospitals Translate research into practice
Incorporate into policies and procedures
Regular educational updates
Implement system-wide standards for documentation and surveillance
Examine products and availability in practice settings
Maximize catheter avoidance and early removals
When feasible, use multicomponent interventions
42. Acknowledgements Current Practice Survey
43. Current Practice Survey Participants All 75 NICHE Coordinators responding to the survey
The 20 dedicated STOP CAUTI Workgroup NICHE Coordinators and site Principal Investigators.
44. STOP CAUTI Funders Primary funder: the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (http://www.ahrq.gov)
Dr. Walds time also funded by the National Institute on Aging, U.S. National Institutes of Health (http://www.nia.nih.gov)
45. The STOP CAUTI Project Team University of Colorado Denver
- Heidi Wald, MD, MSPH, Principal Investigator
Regina Fink, PhD, RN, AOCN, FAAN; Research Scientist
Angela Richard, MS, RN, Project Manager
Brian Bandle, BS, Database manager
NICHE
- Elizabeth Capezuti, PhD, RN, FAAN, Co-Investigator
- Marie Boltz, PhD, RN, GNP-BC, Practice Director
- Nina Shabbat, BA, Benchmarking Assistant
46. What are the goals of the STOP CAUTI study? To understand care practices associated with indwelling catheters at NICHE hospitals.
To disseminate an electronic method for tracking CAUTIs and catheter duration.
To determine the effect of the feedback of these data on processes of care (catheter duration) and outcomes (CAUTIs).
47. For More Information: http://www.ucdenver.edu/academics/colleges/medicalschool/departments/medicine/hcpr/cauti/Pages/default.aspx
48. Thank yoU! Current Practice Survey