Title: P1246990951IgjsQ
1Reducing the Cost and Impact of Infectious Disease
Proud Recipients of 2006 Malcolm Baldrige
National Quality Award
Dan Peterson, MD, MPH Vice President, Medical
Director
2Reasons to address HAIs -- NOT
- Substantial Morbidity and Mortality
- 5-10 of hospitalized patients acquire an
infection - 90,000 lives annually
- Most common bad thing to happen to a patient in
the hospital - However
- Seen as something that just happens
- If you have infection control department, you are
addressing it - You might even make money on it
3Reasons HAIs are Top of Mind in the C-Suite
- New Expectations Zero tolerance
4Original Article An Intervention to Decrease
Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infections in the ICU
Peter Pronovost, M.D., Ph.D., Dale Needham, M.D.,
Ph.D., Sean Berenholtz, M.D., David Sinopoli,
M.P.H., M.B.A., Haitao Chu, M.D., Ph.D., Sara
Cosgrove, M.D., Bryan Sexton, Ph.D., Robert Hyzy,
M.D., Robert Welsh, M.D., Gary Roth, M.D., Joseph
Bander, M.D., John Kepros, M.D., and Christine
Goeschel, R.N., M.P.A.
N Engl J Med Volume 355(26)2725-2732 December
28, 2006
5Study Overview
- Catheter-related bloodstream infections are
associated with significant morbidity - In Michigan, a statewide initiative to reduce
catheter-related bloodstream infections in
intensive care units (ICUs) was implemented - This simple intervention included washing hands,
using full-barrier precautions with central-line
placement, cleaning the skin with chlorhexidine,
avoiding the femoral site if possible, and
removing unnecessary catheters - The median rate of infection per 1000
catheter-days decreased from 2.7 at baseline to 0
throughout all periods after implementation of
the study intervention
6Rates of Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infection
from Baseline (before Implementation of the Study
Intervention) to 18 Months of Follow-up
Pronovost P et al. N Engl J Med 20063552725-2732
7Reasons HAIs are Top of Mind in the C-Suite
8Economics of Central LineAssociatedBloodstream
Infections
- The average payment for a case complicated by
CLAB was 64,894, and the average expense was
91,733 with gross margin of 26,839 per case
and a total loss from operations of 1,449,306 in
the 54 cases. The costs of CLABs and the
associated complications averaged 43 of the
total cost of care. The elimination of these
preventable infections constitutes not only an
opportunity to improve patient outcomes but also
a significant financial opportunity. - Am J Med Qual 2006 21suppl7S-16S
9Economics
10Economics
11(No Transcript)
12Reasons HAIs are Top of Mind in the C-Suite
- New Expectations Zero tolerance
- Costs Publicity Public Awareness
- Public Reporting
- Ability to do something IHI Bundles
- Liability
- Revenue
13Prevention of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
- Robert Garcia, BS, MMT(ASCP), CIC
- Infection Control Professional
14Pathogenesis
15Major Areas of Oropharyngeal Colonization
16(No Transcript)
17Current Preventive Recommendations
IHI 100K Lives Campaign. Getting Started Kit VAP
How-to Guide CDC Guideline for Preventing
Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia, 2002. UI
unresolved issue NA not addressed
1810 Essential Interventions to Prevent VAP
191. Establish Credibility
- Recruit Physician Nurse Champions
- Key areas
- ER
- ICUs
- Anesthesiology
- Med-Surg Units
- All must be committed to same goals
- Leaders must convince their own
- Appoint VAP Leader for each patient unit
202. Educate Train the Frontline Healthcare
Worker
- A. Educate health-care workers regarding the
indications for intravascular catheter use,
proper procedures for the insertion and
maintenance of intravascular catheters, and
appropriate infection-control measuresCat IA. - B. Assess knowledge of and adherence to
guidelines periodically for all persons who
insert and manage intravascular catheters. Cat.
IA
213. Demand Strict Hand Hygiene
- Observe proper hand washing procedures either by
washing hands with conventional
antiseptic-containing soap and water or with
waterless alcohol-based gels or foams. Cat. IA - JCAHO Patient safety Goal 7 requirement
224. Know the Technology Keep it Clean
23(No Transcript)
24Outbreaks Contaminated Environment
- Pimentel, et al. Control of an outbreak of
multi-drug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii in
an intensive care unit and a surgical ward. J
Hosp Infect 200559249-53 - Denton, et al. Role of environmental cleaning in
controlling an outbreak of Acinetobacter
baumannii on a neurosurgical intensive care unit.
Inten Crit Care Nurs 20052194-8.
255. Replace Vent Components only as Needed
- Circuits only when visibly soiled
- HME filter do not replace more frequently than
every 48 hrs. - Closed Suction Catheters only when visibly soiled
266. Elevate the Head of the Bed
- Recent randomized controlled study that disputes
study referenced by CDC to recommend use of
semirecumbent positioning to prevent VAP - Study is unique in three aspects
- Patient positioning was continuously monitored in
first week - The semirecumbent position was compared to the
standard of care - Data analyzed according to the intention-to-treat
principle - Results
- Patients in supine position (control) reached
only 9.8 to 14.8 degrees (i.e., standard of care) - Mean backrest position in study group was 30
degrees - No difference in VAP rates between the groups
van Nieuwenhoven CA, et al. Feasibility and
effects of the semirecumbent position to prevent
ventilator-associated pneumonia A randomized
study. Crit Care med 200634396-402.
27(No Transcript)
28Cant make it to 30 degrees?
- Situations when HOB up 30 degrees may not be
possible - Low BP/unstable VS
- Agitated and at risk of falling out of bed
- Compromised circulation due to femoral lines
- Spinal clearance/Spinal cord injury patients
MUST have a physicians order identifying the
degree of elevation allowed - Use combination of HOB up and reverse
Trendelenburg to obtain a 30 degree angle
297. Administer Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis
Flanders SA, Collard HP, Saint S. Nosocomial
pneumonia State of the Science. Am J Infect
Control 20063684-93
- 7 meta-analyses, 20 studies
- 4 showed significant VAP reductions
- 3 showed similar but non-significant VAP
reductions
- Cook D, et al. A comparison of sucralfate and
rantidine for the prevention of upper
gastrointestinal bleeding in patients requiring
mechanical ventilation. Canadian Critical Care
Trials Group. N Eng J Med 1998338781-97. - Large randomized trial showed no benefit in
either sucralfate or H2 antagonists - Kantorova I, et al. Stress ulcer prophylaxis in
clinically ill patients a randomized controlled
trial. Hepatogastroenterology, 2004200451757-61
. - randomized, placebo-controlled trial, 287 pts.
- studied omeprazole (PPI), famotidine (H2
antagonist), sucralfate - No significant differences in bleeding or
pneumonia rates among the 4 groups
308. Implement Comprehensive Oral Care Interventions
- Strategies to prevent VAP are likely to be
successful only if based upon a sound
understanding of pathogenesis and epidemiology.
The major route for acquiring endemic VAP is
oropharyngeal colonization by endogenous flora or
by pathogens acquired exogenously from the
intensive care unit environment, especially the
hands or apparel of health-care workers,
contaminated equipment, hospital water, or air.
The stomach represents a potential site of
secondary colonization and reservoir of
nosocomial gram-negative bacilli.
Safdar N, Crnich CJ, Maki DG. The pathogenesis of
ventilator-associated pneumonia its relevance to
developing effective strategies for prevention.
Respir Care 200550725-39.
31Linking Oral and Dental Colonization with
Respiratory Infection
- A review of the published evidence linking
oropharyngeal colonization and respiratory
infection, including VAP (20 studies) - Provides suggested oral and dental interventions,
some beyond the scope of current guidelines
Garcia R. A review of the possible role of oral
and dental colonization on the occurrence of
health care-associated pneumonia
Underappreciated risk and a call for
interventions. Am J Infect Control 200533527-41.
32 Oral Cavity vs. Gastric Colonization
- Prospective study of 86 mechanically vented ICU
patients to assess relationship between
oropharyngeal colonization and subsequent
occurrence of pneumonia - Patients oral and gastric specimens were
collected on admission and twice weekly - When pneumonia suspected, bronchoscopic specimens
were taken with protected specimen brush - In 31 cases of pneumonia identified, DNA genomic
analysis demonstrated that oropharyngeal
colonization was the predominant factor in the
development of pneumonia compared with gastric
colonization
Garrouste-Orgeas M, et al. Oropharyngeal or
gastric colonization and nosocomial pneumonia in
adult intensive care unit patients. A prospective
study based on genomic DNA analysis. Am J Respir
Crit Care Med 1997156164
33Acquired bacterial colonization Location of the
microorganisms in the 44 carrier patients
OC oropharyngeal colonization GC gastric
colonization BC both OC/GC colonization
Garrouste-Orgear M, et al. Am J Resp Crit Care
Med 1997.
34 Decontamination of the Oropharynx
- Prospective, randomized, double-blind study of
ICU patients to determine VAP while manipulating
oropharyngeal colonization and without
influencing gastric or intestinal colonization - 87 given topical antibiotics (study group), 139
given placebo (control group) - Results
- VAP in study group 10
- VAP in control group 27
Bergmans D, et al. Prevention of
ventilator-associated pneumonia by oral
decontamination. Am J Resp Crit Care Med
2001164382-88.
35 Dental Plaque as a Bacterial Source of VAP
- Study on dental plaque colonization and ICU
nosocomial infs. - 57 patients studied
- Results
- Dental plaque occurred in 40 of pts.
- Colonization of dental plaque was highly
predictive of nosocomial infection - Salivary, dental, and tracheal aspirates cultures
were closely linked
Fourrier E, et al. Colonization of dental plaque
a source of nosocomial infections in intensive
care patients. Crit Care Med 199826301-8.
36Suggested Oral Dental Care Interventions
37Suggested Oral Dental Care Interventions
(contd)
38Outcome Data
VAP Prevention Initiative, Brookdale Medical
Center, publication pending 2007
39VAP Rates, MICU, 2001-2005
VAP Prevention Initiative, Brookdale Medical
Center, publication pending 2007
409. Institute Active Weaning
- Duration, duration, duration!!!
- Cook D, Meade M, Guyatt G, Griffith L, Booker L.
Criteria for Weaning from Mechanical Ventilation.
Evidence Report/Technology Assessment No. 23
(Prepared by McMaster University under Contract
No. 290-97-0017). AHRQ Publication No. 01-E010.
Rockville MD Agency for Health Care Research and
Quality. November 2002. - Evidence-Based Guidelines for Weaning and
Discontinuing Ventilatory Support. A Collective
Task Force comprised of members of the American
College of Chest Physicians, the American
Association for Respiratory Care and the American
College of Critical care Medicine. Chest
2001120375S-395S.
41Active Weaning Protocols
- Effect of a protocol-driven vent weaning on
outcomes - Results
- Vent use from 0.47 to 0.33 (VD/ICU days)
- VAP 17 in 2000 to 5 in 2002
Dries DJ, et al. Protocol-driven ventilator
weaning reduces use of mechanical ventilation,
rate of early reintubation, and VAP. J Trauma
200456943-51.
42Cost of Mechanical Ventilation
- Retrospective, cohort study designed to examine
costs associated with mechanical ventilation - Data from 253 hospitals, 51,009 pts.
- Mean cost with vent 31,574
- Mean cost without vent 12,931
- Incremental cost of mech. vent per day 1,552
Dasta JF, et al. Daily cost of an intensive care
unit day the contribution of mechanical
ventilation. Crit Care Med 2005331266-71.
4310. Monitor for Compliance
- Design form and log as point prevalence
- HOB where is it documented?
- SUP what drugs are used?
- Oral-Dental care How often do they do each
component? Where d they document? - Weaning where is the initial decision to start
weaning documented?
44Lets Summarize Interventions
- Education Proper Hand Hygiene
- Perform proper cleaning and maintenance of
respiratory care equipment - If HMEs are used, replace vent circuits as needed
- Elevate HOB when not contraindicated
- Perform comprehensive oropharyngeal care
- Establish active weaning protocols
45Robert Garcia, BS, MMT(ASCP), CIC Assistant
Director of Infection Control Brookdale
University Hospital Medical Center One Brookdale
Plaza Brooklyn, NY 11212 718.240.5924 rgarcia_at_broo
kdale.edu President, Enhanced Epidemiology,
LLC P.O. Box 211 Valley Stream, NY
11580 516.810.3093 rgarciaicp_at_aol.com
46Reduction of VAP
- An Evidence-Based Approach to Ventilator
Management
Devin Carr, MSN, RN, APRN, BC, CCRN February 28,
2007
47What is Evidence-Based Medicine?
- the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use
of current best evidence in making decisions
about the care of people. - Dr. David Sackett
48Institute for Healthcare ImprovementThe 100,000
Lives Campaign
- Some is not a number,
- Soon is not a time.
- www.ihi.org
49Six Changes That Save Lives
- Deployment of Rapid Response Teamsat the first
sign of patient decline - Delivery of Reliable, Evidence-Based Care for
Acute Myocardial Infarctionto prevent deaths
from heart attack - Prevention of Adverse Drug Events (ADEs)by
implementing medication reconciliation - Prevention of Central Line Infections by
implementing a series of interdependent,
scientifically grounded steps called the Central
Line Bundle - Prevention of Surgical Site Infections by
reliably delivering the correct perioperative
antibiotics at the proper time - Prevention of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia by
implementing a series of interdependent,
scientifically grounded steps called the
Ventilator Bundle
50The 100,000 Lives Campaign
- Prevention of Ventilator-Associated Pneumoniaby
implementing a series of interdependent,
scientifically grounded steps called the
Ventilator Bundle
51Prevent Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
- Elevation of the head of the bed to between 30
and 45 degrees - Daily Sedation Vacation and daily assessment of
readiness to extubate - Peptic ulcer disease (PUD) prophylaxis
- Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) prophylaxis (unless
contraindicated)
52Prevention Nursing Interventions
- Patient positioning
- HOB elevated 30-45
- Facilitates breathing
- Reduces risk of gastric reflux and subsequent
aspiration
53Prevention
- Nursing Interventions
- Airway management
- STAMP Study (Sole, Byers, Ludy, Zhang, Banta,
Brummel) - Multi-site study of facilities using
closed-system suctioning (CSS) - 1665 nurses and respiratory therapists at 27
sites throughout US - Objectives to describe institutional policies
and procedures related to CSS and airway
management of intubated patients
54Prevention
- STAMP Study
- Policies very widely
- Policies not always research based
- 74 of sites recommend instillation of isotonic
sodium chloride for thick secretions - instillation of isotonic sodium chloride may
actually be harmful - Ridling, Martin Bratton (2001), American
Journal of Critical Care, 12(3), 212. - 82 of sites use single tubing and canister for
both CSS and oral suctioning - 48 of sites recommend minimal leak technique for
maintaining ETT cuff pressures
55Prevention
- STAMP Study
- 50 of sites do not have specificpolicies for
oral care of intubated patients - 10 reported toothbrushes and toothpaste
available - 41 use mouthwash
- 30 use suction swabs
- 15 use chlorhexidine mouth rinse (by
prescription)
56Prevention
- STAMP Study
- 52 reported VAP rates
- Many sites do not track VAP
- Top 5 organisms responsible for VAP
- Pseudomonas aeruginose
- Enterobacter species
- Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
- Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus
- Klebsiella pneumoniae
-
Sole, ML Byers, JF Ludy, JE Zhang, Y Banta,
C, and Brummer, K. (2003) A multisite survey of
suctioning techniques and airway management
practices (CE Article). American Journal of
Critical Care, 12(3), 220.
57Prevention Nursing Interventions
- Ventilator Equipment
- Closed circuit
- Method of humidification
- Frequency of equipment change
58Prevention Nursing Interventions
- Oral Care
- Evidenced-based practice
- Current research to determine best practices
- Best Practice Examples
- AACN Procedure Manual (2005)
- CDC Recommendations (2003)
59Comprehensive Oral Care Program
- The Good Shepherd
- Retrospective study
- VAP rate after practice change showed decrease of
3.4 per 1000 ventilator days - Cost savings approximately 30,000 per VAP
-
Schleder, B., Stott, K., Lloyd, R.C. (2002)
The effect of a comprehensive oral care protocol
on patients at risk for ventilator-associated
pneumonias. Journal of Advocate Health Care,
3(1), 1-8.
60The Vanderbilt Experience
- Protocol
- Assess Oral Cavity q shift
- Brush Teeth q shift with Suction Oral Brush and
1.5 H2O2 solution - Oral care q2h with Suction Oral Swabs and 1.5
H2O2 solution - Hypopharyngeal suctioning at least q6h and PRN
- Apply mouth moisturizer PRN
61The Vanderbilt Experience
- Education
- Bedside inservices by product manufacturer
- E-mail communication
- Posters
- Product brochures
- Communication at staff meetings
62The Vanderbilt Experience
- Trend Reduction 46 over 2 year period
- 35 in 2002 vs. 2001
- 18 in 2003 vs. 2002
- (additional 11 compared to 2001)
63(No Transcript)
64Tracking Compliance
65The 100,000 Lives Campaign Scorecard
- An estimated 122,300 lives saved by participating
hospitals - Over 3,100 hospitals enrolled
- Over 78 of all discharges
- Over 78 of all acute-care beds
- Over 85 of participating hospitals sending IHI
mortality data - Participation in Campaign interventions
- Rapid Response Teams 60
- AMI Care Reliability 77
- Medication Reconciliation 73
- Surgical Site Infection Bundles 72
- Ventilator Bundles 67
- Central Venous Line Bundles 65
- All six 42
66The 5 Million Lives Campaign
67Our Definition of Medical Harm
- Unintended physical injury resulting from or
contributed to by medical care (including the
absence of indicated medical treatment), that
requires additional monitoring, treatment or
hospitalization, or that results in death. - Such injury is considered harm whether or not it
is considered preventable, whether or not it
resulted from a medical error, and whether or not
it occurred within a hospital. - For more information, please reference detailed
FAQs at www.ihi.org/campaign.
68The Platform
- New interventions targeted at harm
- Prevent Pressure Ulcers... by reliably using
science-based guidelines for their prevention - Reduce Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA) Infectionby reliably implementing
scientifically proven infection control practices - Prevent Harm from High-Alert Medications...
starting with a focus on anticoagulants,
sedatives, narcotics, and insulin - Reduce Surgical Complications... by reliably
implementing all of the changes in care
recommended by the Surgical Care Improvement
Project (SCIP) - Deliver Reliable, Evidence-Based Care for
Congestive Heart Failureto reduce readmissions - Get Boards on Board.Defining and spreading the
best-known leveraged processes for hospital
Boards of Directors, so that they can become far
more effective in accelerating organizational
progress toward safe care
69 Assessment of Risk
70Are We Numb to the Risk?
71Call to Action