Article Text
Abstract
Introduction Central-venous-catheter (CVC)-related bloodstream infection (CRBSI) is a complication of intensive care stay which can have important adverse consequences for both patient and institution. There are a number of evidence-based interventions that reduce CRBSI, but it is recognised that consistently applying the best evidence every time is a challenge.
Methods The authors set out to reduce CRBSI and introduced interventions in our intensive care unit (ICU) over a 4-year period using a quality improvement approach. In a setting supportive to change and improvement, the authors established infection surveillance and introduced bundles of care processes relating to insertion and maintenance of CVCs. The changes were supported by educational interventions. The authors measured care processes and outcomes, and used statistical process control charts to illustrate changes. The final 18 months of the work was performed in the context of a national safety improvement programme (The Scottish Patient Safety Programme).
Results Following interventions, the annual CRBSI rate fell from 3.4 to 0/1000 patient days with zero episodes during the final 19 months of the study.
Conclusions The authors describe a significant reduction in CRBSI for the first time in a UK ICU. The authors summarised and simplified what to do, measured and provided feedback on outcomes, and improved expectations of performance standards for care processes. The authors believe that these approaches are worthy of serious consideration elsewhere.
- Nosocomial infections
- patient safety
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Introduction
Central-venous-catheter (CVC)-related bloodstream infections (CRBSIs) are an important cause of hospital-acquired infection associated with morbidity, mortality and cost.1–3 Several interventions prevent them,4 and a study in 103 intensive care units (ICUs) in Michigan5 demonstrated a reduction from 7.7 to 1.4/1000 catheter days following implementation of five care processes including hand hygiene, chlorhexidine skin antisepsis, barrier precautions during insertion, avoidance of femoral site and removal of unnecessary catheters. The Michigan Keystone interventions were introduced in the context of an organisational framework designed to support translation of evidence into practice.6 Some have called for widespread implementation and adoption of evidence-based guidelines7 and these five care processes8 as part of a central line bundle.9 10 Others have concluded that these practices might be worthy of wider implementation but that a further study would be helpful.11 Reduction of CRBSI has not been described in a UK ICU setting. We set out with this intention.
Methods
Stirling Royal Infirmary is a general hospital serving 270 000 people within Forth Valley. ICU CRBSI incidence was measured over a continuous 4-year period from 1 September 2005 to 31 August 009. Every patient admitted for more than 48 h in the adult medical and surgical nine bedded ICU who during part or whole of their admission had a CVC had a daily assessment until discharge for the occurrence of a CRBSI using Hospitals in Europe Links for Infection Control Surveillance (HELICS)12 dataset (online appendix 1) and definition Catheter Related Infection 3 (CRI 3) (online appendix 2). CVC was defined as any intravenous catheter ending at or near the heart. Flow charts to support definitions and diagnostic category were used (online appendices 3, 4). A device day was defined by a patient having a single CVC for a whole or part 24 h period; two catheters for a part or whole 24 h period was defined as two device days and so on. The method of counting all catheter days as the denominator used by HELICS differs from that used by the National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance System13 and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who use a single patient day as the denominator, even if the patient has two catheters on that given day. Infection incidence per 1000 device days and 1000 patient days was displayed on statistical process control (SPC) charts.14 15 Confirmation that every patient was captured was made by crosschecking all names against the ICU admission book and the ICU ‘Ward Watcher’ database. CVCs removed had their tips routinely sent for modified Maki roll16 testing (online appendix 5).
Between 1 September 2005 and 31 December 2006, we focused on infection surveillance (ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP), methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and CRBSI) and performed interventions aimed at improving hand hygiene practices. The first year's CRBSI incidence was 3.4/1000 catheter days. We noted that CRBSI preventive practices at insertion including using chlorhexidine antisepsis and full aseptic technique were not consistently performed. For established CVCs, there was variation in hand-hygiene practices, techniques for commencing injections and infusions, and an inconsistent approach for removal. Common practice was to suggest routine replacement after 7 days sometimes using catheter exchange over a guide wire. These practices are not widely accepted as strategies to prevent CRBSI. There was no daily prompt to remove established CVCs. Although aware of these inconsistencies, we were unable to measures process reliability.
We formed a group consisting of three of our nine consultant clinicians, our infection surveillance nurse and two ICU charge nurses whose stated aim was to reduce CRBSIs in ICU. Two consultants had responsibility for training doctors in Anaesthesia and Intensive Care. Interventions were gradual and iterative commencing January 2007 and were supported by the Critical Care Development Group (our management forum). The ICU had a culture supporting improvements having previous success amalgamating two units into one and introducing renal replacement therapy. Initially, there was minimal hospital administrative role in the project, and although we had no prior experience with performance change (improvement programmes) there was palpable local ownership of the improvement efforts which were seen to come from within the ICU. Ethical approval was viewed as unnecessary, and confirmed by the local ethics committee, since there was no specific research question, and activities were viewed as good practice and routine in other centres. Interventions to reduce VAP17 ran from March 2007 to August 2009.
We agreed interventions derived from published strategies and developed insertion and maintenance bundles. Although these might appear slightly different from those described in Michigan,5 aseptic technique and maximal sterile barrier precautions rather than ‘hand hygiene’ were stipulated at the time of insertion, since this correlated with evidence. The daily prompt for catheter removal was included under maintenance, not insertion.
Insertion bundle
Use aseptic technique and maximal barrier precautions (cap and mask, surgical scrub, sterile gown and gloves).
Use 2% chlorhexidine/70% alcohol solution skin antisepsis.
Avoid femoral site for insertion where possible (use the internal jugular or subclavian route).
Use CVC insertion checklist. This self-adhesive checklist highlighted the points above and other details including the operator name and whether they had completed the CVC education package. The ‘checklist sticker’ served as a record of the procedure in the clinical notes.
We stipulated that the operator and assistant should be trained (as defined by having performed the CVC insertion education package and having placed three supervised CVCs).
Maintenance and removal
CVC removal as soon as not required using a daily removal prompt.
Perform hand hygiene before handling CVC.
Clean injection ports with alcohol wipe before use.
Avoid use of three way taps where possible and use needle-less adaptors for injection ports.
Perform daily dressing inspection and, if soiled, clean site with chlorhexidine and replace dressing.
Use a dedicated lumen for total parenteral nutrition.
We discouraged blood sampling from CVCs unless absolutely necessary.
We discouraged catheter exchange over guide wire.
Behaviour change interventions and implementation strategies
Introduction of the bundles was supported by active engagement of staff, educational programmes, measurement and feedback of outcomes, organisational change and, later, the introduction of the Scottish Patient Safety Programme19 and measurement of insertion bundle processes (online appendix 6).
Results
Figure 1 shows all or none insertion bundle reliability over time annotated to show identification and resolution of causes of incomplete reliability. Detail is given in the online appendix 6. Reliability increased between March 2008 and August 2009.
Table 1 lists the patient characteristics comparing the baseline preintervention from the 1st year with that of the 3rd and 4th years. Interventions commenced halfway through year 2 and continued iteratively until the end of year 4.
Figures 2, 3 show monthly and quarterly SPC charts demonstrating a reduction in infections over time. There is an association with the fall in incidence and the start of interventions and commencement of process measurement.
Table 2 lists the infections, patients, patient days and infection incidence per annum from 2005 to 2009. The incidence ratio was calculated as postintervention year rate/year 1 rate; exact CIs and p values calculated using Stata v 10.0. CRBSI incidence fell from 3.38 to 0.46/1000 device days between year 1 and 3 with an incidence rate ratio of 0.137 (95% CI 0.003 to 0.990) representing a significant 86.3% reduction (p=0.0134). Between year 1 and 4, the incidence fell from 3.38 to 0/1000 device days with an incidence rate ratio of 0 (95% CI 0.0 to 0.63) representing a significant reduction (p=0.0025).
Discussion
The understanding of how to change behaviours and reliably deliver evidence-based interventions is evolving. Although impossible to establish causality, we noted a close association between reliable implementation of interventions known to prevent CRBSI and a fall in the annual CRBSI incidence from 3.38 to 0/1000 device days. High insertion bundle reliability (>80%) was demonstrated over a continuous and prolonged period (18 months) and associated with zero infections. Incomplete reliability was due to failure to place a checklist in the notes, presumably a less important intervention than the other insertion bundle elements. Changes and interventions were iterative and in the context of the social conditions of our ICU overlain latterly by the Scottish Patient Safety Programme19; a national breakthrough collaborative20 including national learning meetings, leadership engagement, access to content and improvement experts, support with collection and interpretation of data and the goal of reducing CRBSI. There are similarities to the Michigan Keystone project5 6 which included designation of clinical and nurse leaders, teams receiving supporting information on the efficacy of components of the intervention, suggestions for implementation and instruction on methods of data collection, training in safety, regular conference calls, coaching and twice-yearly statewide meetings. Key components have been summarised as a focus on systems, engagement of local interdisciplinary teams to assume ownership, centralised support for technical work, encouragement of local adaption of intervention and the creation of a collaborative culture in the local unit and larger system.6 In this sense, it is important to acknowledge that the outcome changes we witnessed are likely to be more complex than the simple introduction of a checklist or bundles and probably reflect more complex social and cultural behaviour changes.21 The observed reduction in CRBSI could be seen as a surrogate and indirect measure of staff performance change.22 Further study and understanding of the relationship between social behaviour-change interventions and staff behaviours is required. It is not clear how long this kind of improvement can be sustained, and what the key elements will be to maintaining it.
As with the Michigan5 study, data collection and interventions were non-blinded using non-controlled before and after cohorts. Insertion processes were measured only for ICU-placed CVCs. We did not measure maintenance processes; nor did we perform a health economic assessment, although others have demonstrated significant potential cost savings from preventing infection.23–25 We made no formal assessment of potential adverse effects of the intervention, although none were brought to our attention. Although we described educational interventions, we did not objectively quantify the dose or staff knowledge before or after.
Regression to the mean is an unlikely explanation for improvement, since the baseline infection rate was similar to the rates reported from other Scottish ICUs (4.2/1000 device days).26 The SPC chart demonstrated a common cause variation in the baseline period, further supporting the likelihood that the change to zero infection rate represented special cause variation.
The following discussion concerns results shown in table 1. There is no difference in mean Acute Physiological and Chronic Health Evaluation Version II score from year to year. However, there were some important differences. The total number of CVCs used fell significantly from 414 in year 1 to 317 in year 3 and 249 in year 4. There is a non-significant reduction in the percentage of patients per year with a CVC from 93% (baseline) to 79% (year 4). There was a higher mean duration of CVC placement postinterventions, increasing significantly from 4.9 days (baseline) to 6.1 and 9.6 days in years 3 and 4 respectively. This might reflect a cohort of patients who previously had a CVC for a short duration of time but who are now managed without. Fewer CVCs would predispose to reduced infection incidence, but longer catheter placement durations would predispose to increased incidence. Internal jugular catheters increased significantly from 80.2% (baseline) to 89.3% (year 3) and 91.1% (year 4). Femoral catheters fell significantly from 4.6% (baseline) to 2.8% (year 4). Subclavian catheters fell significantly from 15.2% (baseline) to 6.0% (year 4). The increased internal jugular and decreased femoral site is consistent with the insertion bundle, but it is unclear why there was a reduction in subclavian catheters. There was a non-significant reduction in median length of stay from 9.7 to 6.0 days. Unadjusted mortality fell from 21.2% (baseline) to 16% (year 4) in patients with CVCs. Multiple factors influence mortality.
Conclusion
We describe a significant reduction in CRBSI (with zero episodes in the final 19 months of study) in a UK ICU. We summarised and simplified what to do, measured and provided feedback on outcomes, and improved the culture by building expectations of performance standards for work processes.21
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank M Williamson, Y Curran and Health Protection Scotland, A Duff, M Mallice, L Shepherd, P Scott, M Fraser, L Hutchison, J Grant and the ICU staff. We would also like to thank R Lloyd and the anonymous reviewers for their comments on earlier versions of this manuscript.
References
Supplementary materials
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Footnotes
Part of this work was previously reported as an abstract at the International Forum on Quality and Safety in Healthcare (Berlin, March 2009).
Funding Health Protection Scotland provided funding for a nurse salary for the second year of the project. Health Protection Scotland, Clifton House, 1–7 Clifton Place, Glasgow G3 7LN.
Competing interests AGL has recently completed a Scottish Patient Safety Programme Fellowship. SM is currently undertaking the same. LB is Nursing Lead for the Critical Care work stream of the Scottish Patient Safety Programme at Stirling Royal Infirmary.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.