Title: Patient Safety - Infection Prevention
1Patient Safety - Infection Prevention
Donna Armellino, RN, DNP, CICVice President,
Infection PreventionNorth Shore LIJ Health
System
2Infection Surveillance
- Data is collected by staff that has certification
by the Certification Board of Infection Control
and Epidemiology, Inc.
- Definition for healthcare-associated infections
are from the Centers for Disease Control and
Preventions National Healthcare Safety Network
(NHSN) - Information used to screen for cases includes
laboratory data, admission diagnosis, readmission
data, Emergency Department chief complaint,
return to the operating room, etc...
Deep incisional SSI
3Healthcare-Acquired Infection (HAIs)
- Central Line Associated Bacteremias (CLABSI)
- Intensive Care Units (ICU)
- Non-ICU
- Ventilator Associated Pneumonias (VAPs)
- ICU
- Non-ICU
- Surgical Site Infections (SSIs)
- Select or all high volume procedures
- Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infections
(CAUTI) - ICU
- Non-ICU
- Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA) infections and colonization - Facility-wide
- Clostridium difficile
- Facility-wide
3
4Required HAI Monitoring and Reporting
- New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) and
Center for Medicare Medicaid Services (CMS)
Through the National Healthcare Safety (NHSN) - Surgical procedure monitored and SSIs reported
based on ICD-9 codes for - Hip
- Colon CMS 01/01/12
- Cardiac
- Hysterectomies CMS 01/01/12
- Other HAIs
- Central line-associated bacteremias (CLABSI) CMS
01/01/11 - ICU - Catheter-associated urinary tract infection
(CAUTI) CMS 01/01/12 ICU only - Clostridium difficile
5HAI Data Comparison
- NHSN
- SSI comparison to other reporting facilities
within the United States is with a Standard
Infection Ration (SIR) - The SIR adjusts for patients of varying risk
within each facility. - An SIR gt 1.0 indicates that more SSIs were
observed than predicted and a SIR lt 1.0 indicates
that fewer SSIs were observed than predicted. - New York State Department of Health
- Report using upper and lower confidence levels
and the average for the NYSDOH below, average,
and higher than the NYS average.
6HAI Sample NHSN Data
More information can be found athttp//www.cdc.go
v/nhsn/PDFs/dataStat/NHSN-Report_2010-Data-Summary
.pdf
7HAI Sample NYSDOH Data
More information can be found at
http//www.health.ny.gov/statistics/facilities/hos
pital/hospital_acquired_infections
8HAI Impact
- Potentially preventable HAIs cause patient harm
- morbidity
- mortality
- increased length of stay
- Increase health care cost
Are HAIs really preventable?
9Health System Facilities CLABSI Free Months
- Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
- Glen Cove - gt41 months
- Forest Hills - gt6 months
- Huntington ICU - gt 24 months
- Southside ICU 9 months
- Long Island Jewish 2 ICUs - gt24 months
- North Shore University Hospital PICU - gt14 months
NSCU - gt6 months - Non-ICU
- Glen Cove - gt18 months
- Syosset - gt22 months
- Franklin - gt6 Months
- Medical Adolescent gt24 months
10CLABSI 2004 - 2011
ICU CLABSI per 1,000 Central Line Days
From September 2005 to December 2008, central
line insertion bundle compliance increased from
25 to gt80.
Change 2005 through 2008
11Standards of Practice CLABSI
- Central line insertion and dressing kit with
chlorhexidine/alcohol - Standardized evidence-based central line protocol
- Antiseptic-impregnated catheters for high risk
patients - Insertion bundle checklist (skin preparation with
chlorhexidine, use of barriers when inserting,
site selection, daily assessment) - Procedure STOP when there is a break in
insertion technique - Antiseptic dressings/impregnated chlorhexidine
disk - Needless connectors (neutral pressure)
- Scrub the hub or alcohol cap
- Daily chlorhexidine baths
- Simulation to increase competency
11
12Journey Toward Zero Ongoing Learning
LINE MAINTENANCE
TECHNIQUE NOT ADEQUATE
LACK OF EDUCATION
CLABSI Assessment Identification of patterns or
trends
IV tubing not changed on a timely basis
Not compliant with hand hygiene
Inexperienced residents and clinicians
Line in for too long
Line inserted w/o sterile technique
Clinicians not knowledgeable about Central Line
Bundle
Dressing not change using aseptic
techniques
Inadequate use of maximal barrier precautions
Nurses do not properly know how to change
dressings
IV tubing not labeled properly to change
MD does not select a catheter with the least
number of lumens
Inadequate prep before insertion
Line not manipulated appropriately
Femoral line chosen instead of subclavian
Injection hub not disinfected
Clinicians unaware of line maintenance
CLABSI
13CAUTI Process Change Outcome Change
Baseline (Feb. 2011 July 2011)
Post-intervention (Aug. 2011 Feb. 14, 2012)
Southside Hospital device utilization
LIJ infection decrease
Syosset Hospital infection
Plainview Hospital device utilization
14Standard of Practice Indwelling Urinary Catheter
- Place indwelling urinary catheters only when
indicated - Urinary tract obstruction
- Gross hematuria
- Neurogenic bladder with retention
- Urologic surgery or studies
- Hospice, Comfort or Palliative Care (if patient
requests) - When inserted adhere to
- Hand hygiene
- Aseptic technique when inserting
- Maintain indwelling urinary catheter based on
center for Disease Control and Prevention
guidelines - Review the need for indwelling urinary catheters
daily and remove when no longer needed
15Joint Project Bundle
- Use of an alcohol-containing antiseptic agent for
preoperative skin preparation. - Preoperative bathing or showering for 3 days
prior to surgery with - 2 CHG impregnated wipe, or
- 4 Chlorhexidine Gluconate soap
- Nasal Staphylococcus aureus screening and use of
intranasal Mupirocin for 5 days - Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP)
practices - Appropriate use of prophylactic antibiotics
- dosing
- selection
- timing prior to incision
- re-dosing based on the facility protocol
- Appropriate hair removal
16Potential Avoidance Case Review
- Patient 67 year-old male
- Past Medical History chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease, elevated blood pressure, and
osteoarthritis - Surgical History open reduction and internal
fixation (ORIF) for a tibia fracture on 08/25/11
following a motor vehicle accident - Post-operatively Uncomplicated admission and was
discharged home - Readmission Chief Complaint
- On 09/13/11 he had drainage, pain, and increased
swelling at the surgical site - The patient was evaluated by the surgeon within
the office, sent to the Emergency Department and
subsequently admitted
17Potential Avoidance Case Review
Continued
- Hospitalization
- Laboratory
- Surgical wound and blood cultures were positive
for methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus - Patient remained bacteremic for 8 days
- Procedures
- Transesophageal echocardiogram (TEE) negative for
endocarditis - Return to the operating room for a wound
debridement on 09/13/11 - Antibiotic treatment Treatment with vancomycin
for more than 42 days - Additional management Return to the operating
room for removal of hardware
18Problem Hand Hygiene
Project Aim Improved and sustained high hand
hygiene compliance
193rd Party Remote Video Auditing
- Door motion detector triggers audit
- Video camera records activity
- Digital Video Recorders stores footage locally
- External auditors connect remotely
- Auditors rate activity based on pass/fail
criteria - Audits stored in external auditors database
- Feedback delivered via on-site light emitting
diode boards, daily e-mails, and weekly e-mails
20Timeline 2008
4
10/06/08 Hand hygiene compliance calculated with
the use of remote video auditing and real-time
feedback
1
02/08 Discussion with staff on the use of Cameras
for Hand Hygiene Compliance
03/08 04/08 05/08 06/08 07/08 8/08 9/08 10/08 11/08 12/08 01/09 02/09 03/09 04/09
3
06/10/08 Hand hygiene compliance calculated with
the use of remote video auditing
07/04/10 Remote video auditing with feedback
continues
03/08 Cameras and door alarms installed
2
21Hand Hygiene Measurement
- Measurement Hand hygiene with soap and water or
an alcohol based hand sanitizer - Pass hand hygiene observed in a patient room or
neighboring area within 10 seconds (before or
after) of entry or exit to a patient room - Fail no hand hygiene observed as per protocol
- Discarded events entries/exits by non-clinical
staff or visitor and multiple entries/exits
within 60 seconds of another - Quality control audits 5 of the recorded events
to ensure consistency and accuracy
22Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
- Inclusion Nurses, aides, house staff, and other
clinicians wearing any type of scrub or uniform
were classified into the category of other health
care professional, and physicians not wearing
scrubs were classified as attending physician - Exclusion Non-clinical workers and visitors
23Figure Without and With Feedback
Internal Self-Auditing Scores
Start Feedback 10/06/08
- Without feedback hand hygiene rates of lt10
(3,833/60,066) - With feedback the rates were gt86
(223,187/261,091) (plt0.001)
24Partnership for Patients
- Healthcare Association of New York State/Greater
New York Hospital Association initiative to
decrease - CLABSI
- CAUTI
- Goal
- To eliminate and sustain reductions in CLABSI and
CAUTIs by gt40 by 11/2013.
25IPRO 10th Scope of Work
- Aim
- Prevention, Reduction, Elimination
- CLABSI reduction of 50 by 03/13
- CAUTI reduction of 25 by 03/13
- Clostridium difficile
- Surgical Site Infections (SSIs)
26Health Care Personnel Vaccination
- Average vaccination rate -45.
- 20111/2012 vaccinate rate -58.
- Highest vaccination rate was when New York State
Department of Health mandated the influenza
vaccine in 2009/2010 - 79. - 2012/2013 plan 100 program participation
- accept the vaccine or
- declining with knowledge regarding placing
yourself and others at risk
27darmelli_at_nshs.edu