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Linking Blood Stream Infections to Intensive Care Nursing Context of Care and Process. Jill A. Marsteller, PhD, MPP; J. Bryan Sexton, PhD, MA; Yea-Jen Hsu, MHA, PhD Candidate; Chun-Ju Hsiao, PhD, MPH; David Thompson, DNSc, MS, RN.
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Linking Blood Stream Infections to Intensive Care Nursing Context of Care and Process Jill A. Marsteller, PhD, MPP; J. Bryan Sexton, PhD, MA; Yea-Jen Hsu, MHA, PhD Candidate; Chun-Ju Hsiao, PhD, MPH; David Thompson, DNSc, MS, RN Funded by the Interdisciplinary Nursing Quality Research Initiative, a national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Background • Central-Line Associated Blood Stream Infections (CLABSI) are among the most common and most serious types of hospital-acquired infections • Between 9,600 and 20,000 patients are estimated to die from CLABSIs annually in the US • The estimated cost of treating CLABSIs ranges from $296 million to $2.3 billion • The risks for CLABSIs are especially great for patients in ICUs, • 48% of patients in ICUs have indwelling central venous catheters • Approximately 15 million central line days per year in U.S. ICUs • CLABSI are most often preventable Unpublished data—Not for circulation
How was this different from Keystone ICU? • Pronovost et al. 2006 NEJM reported results of Keystone ICU project in Michigan ICUs (also New Yorker article) • This project was different because: • Randomized controlled trial • Acknowledged the key nursing role • Collected contextual measures • Team Checkup Tool and interviews w/ teams • NQF nursing quality measures Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Study Population • 45 adult ICUs in 35 hospitals across two affiliated faith-based health care systems (East n=35 ICUs and West n=10) • The hospitals included in this study represent 12 states and are all community non-profit religious hospitals • Religious hospitals provide health care for one-fifth of all Americans Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Adventist-QSRG ICU Patient Safety Intervention CLABSI-Prevention Bundle Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP) Unpublished data—Not for circulation
CUSP • Evaluate the culture of safety • Educate the staff on science of safety • Encourage staff to identify how the next patient might be harmed • Assign an executive to adopt the unit • a) Learn from one system defect in the work environment per month; b) Implement one teamwork tool every 2 months (daily goals; morning briefing; shadowing; culture check up) • Re-evaluate culture Unpublished data—Not for circulation
CLABSI Prevention • Washing hands before inserting a central line • Removing unnecessary lines • Cleansing the site with chlorhexidine • Using full barrier precautions • Avoiding the femoral site for line placement (some preference for the subclavian site) Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Study Design • Phased, clustered randomized controlled trial • ICUs randomized by hospital into intervention (23 ICUs) and control (22 ICUs) conditions for the first seven months (then control became Intervention II) • Analyses: test of the intervention Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Conceptual Framework Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Data Collection andMeasures • Laboratory Confirmed CLABSI andLine Days • Team Check-up Tool • Nursing turnover, skill mix, RN hours per patient day, PES-NWI • SAQ • Exposure to elements of the intervention • ICU Length of stay • ICU Mortality • ICU Charges Unpublished data—Not for circulation
RCT analysis • Intervention I group started March 2007 • Control group started the intervention in Oct 2007 • RCT compares post-intervention (Oct-Dec 2007) CLABSI rate, holding baseline (2006) rates constant (zero-inflated poisson regression) • Two groups equivalent at baseline on all measures except two (exposure to CUSP and to partnership with a senior executive) Unpublished data—Not for circulation
The Effect of the Intervention: Model 1 Unpublished data—Not for circulation
The Effect of the Intervention: Model 2 Unpublished data—Not for circulation
No. of Bloodstream Infections per 1000 catheter-Days Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Quarterly BSIs per 1000 line days Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Challenges of the Design • Controls knew they would also be implementing • In interviews, some controls told us they had gotten started early • Controls did not report during control period—so “post” period is actually first 3 mo.s of intervention • Education delivery was better 2nd time Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Staff Use (1) Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Staff Use (2) Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Estimated Lives Saved over 2006 • ~20% of people acquiring CLABSI will die from the infection • An estimated 35 to 36 people died in 2 systems in 2006 • If rate in quarter ending August 2008 stays the same over a year, only an estimated 12 people would die of CLABSIs June 2008-May 2009 • A 66% reduction Unpublished data—Not for circulation * Preliminary estimates
Estimated Cost Savings • BSIs cost an estimated ~$45,000 per infection • Reduced BSIs could have saved as much as $5,850,000 across the two systems!! Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Conclusions • The CLABSI evidence-based practice bundle reduces bloodstream infections and zero can be achieved for long periods of time • The bundle can be implemented effectively as a nursing-driven protocol for interdisciplinary team management of central line placement and maintenance • Despite the promising results there were many barriers to implementation, such as physician engagement; adherence to protocol • Difficult to achieve team compliance with monthly reporting by all team members Unpublished data—Not for circulation
Policy/ Managerial Implications • CMS has said it will not pay for CLABSI above the normal IPPS payment for the case starting Oct. 1, 2008 (Deficit Reduction Act of 2005) • Assumes all infections can be prevented • All hospitals will need to implement CLABSI prevention strategies • QI teams need education, attention from and support of senior management, BoD Unpublished data—Not for circulation