E N D
1. CARE BUNDLES IN THE ACUTE AND COMMUNITY SETTING
CENTRAL LINES AND URINARY CATHETERS
Fiona Barry
Infection Prevention and Control Nurse
Mercy University Hospital, Cork.
fbarry@muh.ie
UCC 8 September 2011
5. The 5 Moments apply to any setting where health care involving direct contact with patients takes place
6. 1st principle of infection prevention
at least 35-50% of all healthcare-associated infections are associated with only 5 patient care practices:
Use and care of urinary catheters
Use and care of vascular access lines
Therapy and support of pulmonary functions
Surveillance of surgical procedures
Hand hygiene and standard precautions
7. Innovations in Health Care 1497 100 of 160 crew die form scurvy
1601 Lancaster gave lemon juice to the crew of one ship on the way to India. 110 of 278 sailors died on the 3 other ships.
1747 (146 yrs later) random trial proved the efficacy of citrus fruits
48 yrs later adopted by the RN
1865 Board of Trade ruling
Time of implementation 264 years Lancaster was director of the East India Company
4 ships set sail on an expedition which took 5 months to reach their destinationLancaster was director of the East India Company
4 ships set sail on an expedition which took 5 months to reach their destination
8. Patient safety Intensive Care in the ROI suffers from excessive diversity in service provision
Experience from high reliability organisations
Need to standardise procedures / critical processes through guidelines
Need a checklist model Patient safety is the top of the agenda
.
We know that despite the aims of CG there exists diversity in practice
There is evidence to support this from organisations such as NCEPOD
Need to have standardised protocolsPatient safety is the top of the agenda
.
We know that despite the aims of CG there exists diversity in practice
There is evidence to support this from organisations such as NCEPOD
Need to have standardised protocols
9. Aim Background
Care Bundle definition
Types of Care Bundles
Care Bundles in practice culture change
10. Bundle Aim To eliminate the piecemeal application of guidelines that characterises the majority of clinical environments today
To make it easier for clinicians to bring guidelines into practice
11. Why? Rate of bacteraemia associated with CVC is increasing year on year
HIQA Infection Control Standards 2008
Standard 8
Device related infections are reduced or prevented
Criteria 8.1
the implementation of a structured set of processes that have been proven to improve outcomes, (e.g. bundles) for the prevention of invasive medical devices related infections
12. Do Central Lines Cause Bloodstream Infections? Central venous catheters (CVCs) disrupt the integrity of the skin, making infection with bacteria and/or fungi possible.
Infection may spread to the bloodstream and hemodynamic changes and organ dysfunction (severe sepsis) may ensue.
Approximately 90% of the catheter-related bloodstream infections (BSIs) occur with CVCs. Central venous catheters (CVCs) are increasingly used in the inpatient and outpatient setting to provide long-term venous access. The most common complication of CVCs is infection, and nosocomial infection for hospitalized patients. The principal problem is the disruption of the integrity of the skin. The consequences may include bloodstream infection, sepsis, and/or death.Central venous catheters (CVCs) are increasingly used in the inpatient and outpatient setting to provide long-term venous access. The most common complication of CVCs is infection, and nosocomial infection for hospitalized patients. The principal problem is the disruption of the integrity of the skin. The consequences may include bloodstream infection, sepsis, and/or death.
13. Healthcare workers are committed to delivering high standards of care to all patients
Standards of care are generally defined by evidence based guidelines, e.g. infection control guidelines
SARI guidelines
CDC guidelines(USA)
EPIC/NICE guidelines (UK) Standards of care
14. Dr.Peter Pronovost is accredited with developing the first Care Bundle-insertion and management of CVCS
Intensivist in a hospital in Michigan
Developed a checklist for insertion and management of CVCs to ensure that key interventions recommended by the CDC 2002 guidelines were implemented every time a CVC was inserted Background to Care Bundles
16. Bundle:
Hand hygiene
MSB
Skin antisepsis with chlorhexidine
Avoiding femoral access
Remove of needless CVC
17. Keystone ICU Project: The Results 66% reduction in Central Line Bloodstream Infections (CLBSI)
Interventions:
Hand hygiene
Max. barrier prec. during insertion
CHG antiseptic on insertion site
Avoid femoral CLs
Remove CL when not needed
Pronovost P, et al. NEJM 2006;355:2725-32.
18. Keystone Project Michigan Hospital Association
127 intensive care units (ICUs) in Michigan and five other states.
68 ICUs totally eliminated CVC-BSIs.
For 6 months, they eliminated VAP.
Estimates that they saved >1,578 lives, reduced 81,000 hospital days, and saved $165 million.
Hospitals in Rhode Island, New Jersey and Maryland are replicating the Keystone Project locally and others will follow.
Pronovost P. et al NEJM 2006;355:2725-32
19. A care bundle is a collection of interventions
(usually 3-5) that are evidence based
All clinical staff know that these interventions are best practice but frequently their application in routine care is inconsistent
A care bundle is a means to ensure that the application of all interventions is consistent for all patients at all times thereby improving outcomes Care bundles
20. Care bundles explained A global standard of care management
A defined as a group of interventions related to a disease process that when implemented together result in better outcomes than when implemented individually
Bundle components can easily be measured as completed or not completed: all-or-none compliance A concept created by the IHI
The term Bundle is growing in popularity throughout the Health Care Quality Improvement world.
A grouping of several scientifically grounded elements essential to improving clinical outcomesA concept created by the IHI
The term Bundle is growing in popularity throughout the Health Care Quality Improvement world.
A grouping of several scientifically grounded elements essential to improving clinical outcomes
21. What makes a bundle so special? The power of a bundle comes from the body of science behind it and the method of execution: with complete consistency.
Its not that the changes in a bundle are new; theyre well established best practices, but theyre often not performed uniformly, making treatment unreliable.
A bundle ties the changes together into a package of interventions that people know must be followed for every patient, every single time.
22. What else is a bundle? Methodology to spread the use of generally accepted science
Provide a pressure for teamwork
Simple, memorable checklist
Audit tool
All aspects should be done to get the maximum benefit
23. WHO Surgery Safety Checklist
Urinary Catheter Care Bundle
Insertion and Management
Clostridium difficile care bundle
Ventilator assisted Pneumonia care bundle
Palliative care bundle
Pressure area care bundle
Sepsis care bundle
PVC care Bundle
Types of Care Bundles
26. Guidelines dont work on their own? What normally happens to guidelines ??? The get filed away in a dark scary place like the Lost Arc kept in a vast repository or in our case the place known as The IntranetWhat normally happens to guidelines ??? The get filed away in a dark scary place like the Lost Arc kept in a vast repository or in our case the place known as The Intranet
27. Plan
All staff needed to develop an awareness of the surviving sepsis campaign and the care bundle elements. We are very fortunate to have a team of dedicated educators within Critical Care. This team forms ready made champions of quality improvement care packages. These champions will prove to have a direct impact on the success of the implementation of the bundles.
Myself and the team developed a multi-phased approach:
Teaching boards displayed within Critical Care with brief info on the care bundle concept and all the elements
Presentations at G grade away day
Discussion at Consultants meeting
The offer of one-one teaching sessions by any member of the education team
The G grade shift co-ordinators were the target group for assessing which patients had developed or admitted with sepsis. However initially I undertook this role and then worked on a one-one basis with each shift co-ordinator to ensure that they understood everything
Do
Initially the information system was not ready for data collection, so I used pen and paper to collect the data however Ive recently had the opportunity to play with the new data base and it is extremely easy to use and it analyses the results as soon as the data is put in
Study
This is an important element in order to see the weaknesses of implementation and act on them Evaluate the available information
Understand what the info is telling you
If there is a particular problem area what are its symptoms and causes
Make the plan permanent / study the adjustments
Decide what action is needed
Adopt the change permanently
Abandon the change
Make some adjustment and go round the cycle again
Plan
All staff needed to develop an awareness of the surviving sepsis campaign and the care bundle elements. We are very fortunate to have a team of dedicated educators within Critical Care. This team forms ready made champions of quality improvement care packages. These champions will prove to have a direct impact on the success of the implementation of the bundles.
Myself and the team developed a multi-phased approach:
Teaching boards displayed within Critical Care with brief info on the care bundle concept and all the elements
Presentations at G grade away day
Discussion at Consultants meeting
The offer of one-one teaching sessions by any member of the education team
The G grade shift co-ordinators were the target group for assessing which patients had developed or admitted with sepsis. However initially I undertook this role and then worked on a one-one basis with each shift co-ordinator to ensure that they understood everything
Do
Initially the information system was not ready for data collection, so I used pen and paper to collect the data however Ive recently had the opportunity to play with the new data base and it is extremely easy to use and it analyses the results as soon as the data is put in
Study
This is an important element in order to see the weaknesses of implementation and act on them Evaluate the available information
Understand what the info is telling you
If there is a particular problem area what are its symptoms and causes
Make the plan permanent / study the adjustments
Decide what action is needed
Adopt the change permanently
Abandon the change
Make some adjustment and go round the cycle again
28. Prevention of CVC-BSI
29. Reducing HCAI CLC Bundle.....insertion Hand hygiene
Decontaminate hands before and after each patient contact
Use correct hand hygiene procedure
Maximal barrier precautions
PPE
Single use gloves
Eye/face protection
Aseptic technique
Sterile gown, gloves,mask and full body drape
Chlorhexidine skin antisepsis (2% Chlorhexidine Gluconate in 70% Isopropyl Alchohol)
Catheter
Optimal catheter site selection, with subclavian vein as the preferred site for non-tunnelled catheters
Single lumen unless indicated otherwise
32. Care bundle checklist for insertion of CVC
33. Insertion checklist in the notes
34. Reducing HCAI CLC Bundle....maintenance
Hand hygiene
Decontaminate hands before and after each patient contact
Use correct hand hygiene procedure
Catheter site inspection
Regular observation for signs of infection ie. leakage, inflammation etc AT LEAST DAILY
Dressing
A sterile, transparent, semi-permeable dressing should be in place
Ensure dressing is intact and dry
Catheter access
Aseptic technique swabbing ports/hubs with 2% Chlorhexedine prior to access
Clinical indicator for line has been reviewed to-day
Daily review of line necessity with prompt removal of unnecessary lines
37.
Comment (if required)
Total number of CVCs in situ at start of CVC Maintenance Bundle
Total number of CVCs with documented need to remain in situ.
Total number of CVCs with evidence of optimal dressing (intact and changed within past 7 days)
Total number of CVCs with evidence of alcohol hub decontamination prior to all line maintenance/access procedures.
Total number of CVCs with evidence of hand hygiene performed before and after all CVC procedures
Total number of CVCs with evidence of Chlorhexidine gluconate 2% used for insertion site antisepsis at last dressing change.
Summary Table of CVC Bundle Findings
38. 5. Hand Hygiene
39.
39
40. Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI) is the second leading cause of device-related bacteraemia. They increase the risk of UTI by:
enabling organisms to gain entry to the bladder - via external surface or opened connection
reducing the bodys defence of flushing out organisms during mictuition
facilitating biofilm formation
The organisms causing CAUTI, can be endogenous - from the patient's own gut flora, or cross-transmitted through poor infection control practices. Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infection
41. The organisms causing CAUTI, can be endogenous - from the patient's own gut flora, or cross-transmitted through poor infection control practices.
Healthcare workers should always look for opportunities to reduce the use of invasive devices.
Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infection
42. The CAUTI maintenance bundle is to optimise the care of patients who require urinary catheterisation during acute care - and to ensure that urinary catheters are removed as soon as clinically indicated. AIM OF CAUTI MAINTEANCE BUNDLE
43. Perform a daily review of the need for the urinary catheter.
Check the catheter has been continuously connected to the drainage system.
Ensure patients are aware of their role in preventing urinary tract infection. (Alternative bundle criterion if the patient is unable to be made aware: Perform routine daily meatal hygiene).
Regularly empty urinary drainage bags as separate procedures, each into a clean container.
Perform hand hygiene and don gloves and apron prior to each catheter care procedure; on procedure completion, remove gloves and apron and perform hand hygiene again. THE BUNDLE -CAUTI
44. Insertion
Insert only for specific reasons
Urinary output in critical ill
Bladder outlet obstruction or neurogenic bladder dysfunction
Prevent contamination of sacral wounds
Terminal care
Competent HCW to insert
Aseptic technique
Closed system with bag below bladder
Urinary Catheter Care Bundle
45. Management
Review need for catheter daily
Empty when ž full and use clean container for each patient
Secure catheter to leg/abdomen
Urine samples from sampling port only
Hand hygiene & PPE before and after any catheter care
Urinary Catheter Care Bundle
46.
SARI Guidelines on Prevention of Catheter Related Urinary Tract Infections will be published later this year
Care Bundle will be published with the guidelines Urinary Catheter Care Bundle
48. Insertion
50. The Catheter in the Community is to optimise the care of patients who require urinary catheterisation - and to ensure that urinary catheters are changed and maintained appropriately. This bundle is different from the bundle used in acute settings where the emphasis is on removal of the urinary catheter when clinically indicated as opposed to ensuring urinary catheters are changed and maintained appropriately in the community setting.
The Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI) maintenance bundle for use in the Community
51. The review date for urinary catheter change has not passed.
The catheter has been continuously connected to the drainage system and the tap remains closed following emptying, connecting and reconnecting.
Patients/carers are aware of their role in daily personal hygiene to minimise the risk of developing UTI or daily meatal hygiene has been performed by nurses/carer.
Urinary drainage bags are regularly emptied into a clean container or WC.
Hand hygiene is performed before and after catheter care procedure;
MAINTENANCE BUNDLE IN THE COMMUNITY
52. Very little information available on this issue
Dependent on the culture of the organisation
The following ideas may help
1.Find a colleague who is interested also!
2.Find out all the info on the subject you can
3.Liase with other colleagues in other organisations for good ideas
4.Leader-nominate/high visibility
5.Buy in-staff/other disciplines
6.Education
7.Communication channels
8.Time-implement/wont get it perfect
9. Review current policy/guidelines
10.MOTIVATION AND ENERGY
How to implement
55. Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (2002). Guidelines for the prevention of intravascular catheter-related infections. MMWR Mortality and Morbidity Weekly Report 2002, vol 51, (No RR10), pp 1-26.
Health Information Quality Authority (2009). National Standards for the Prevention and Control of Healthcare Associated Infections.
Health Protection Surveillance Centre. (2009). SARI Prevention of Intra- Vascular related Catheter Infections in Ireland.
REFERENCES
56. Pittet, D. (2005). Infection control and quality health care in the new millennium. American Journal of Infection Control, vol 33, pp 258-67.
An Intervention to Decrease Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infections in the ICU
Peter Pronovost et al
N Engl J Med 2006; 355:2725-2732December 28, 2006
REFERENCES
57. References Institute for Healthcare Improvement website for infection prevention bundles: www.IHI.orghttp://www.ihi.org/IHI/Topics/CriticalCare/IntensiveCare/Changes/ImplementtheVentilatorBundle.htm and http://www.ihi.org/IHI/Topics/CriticalCare/IntensiveCare/Changes/ImplementtheCentralLineBundle.htm and http://www.ihi.org/IHI/Programs/AudioAndWebPrograms/ExpeditionReducingCatheterAssociatedUrinaryTractInfections.htm
Health Protection Scotland Bundle site 2009 http://www.hps.scot.nhs.uk/haiic/ic/guidelines.aspx#bundles