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Hand Hygiene In and Out: Compliance and Sustainability Are Possible: 90/90 Program in a Mexican Tertiary-Care Center
- Roxana Trejo González, Miguel Ángel García Salcido, Diana Palami Antunez, Reyna Yacaman Handal
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- Journal:
- Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology / Volume 41 / Issue S1 / October 2020
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 November 2020, pp. s241-s242
- Print publication:
- October 2020
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Background: The American British Cowdray Medical Center I.A.P., also known as ABC Medical Center, is a highly specialized hospital and private assistance institution located in Mexico City. The ABC Medical Center implemented hand hygiene policies since around 2009, when Mexico committed to patient security. However, hand hygiene compliance remained low. Methods: The objective of the Hand Hygiene 90/90 program was to increase hand hygiene compliance through an integral strategy including a multidisciplinary team with leaders from different areas (nursing, physicians, human resources, quality, and educators). It was named 90/90 because it aimed to accomplish a 90% hand hygiene compliance among all health providers and hospital staff in 90 days (October 1–December 29) upon entering and exiting patient rooms (ie, In & Out). The Hand Hygiene 90/90 program led by the epidemiology area consisted of 5 specific components: management, supplies, education, monitoring, and social marketing (Fig. 1). For a period of 90 days, several permanent actions were implemented; they had a positive influence on the expected outcome (Fig. 2). Results: The starting point at the ABC Medical Center upon launching the program was 70% compliance. With the Hand Hygiene 90/90 program, the first steady change was observed at the end of November 2012 (ie, the sixth measurement point). An 88% compliance was achieved, all compliance was >50% from this point on. The highest compliance was achieved among health providers (doctors and nurses), followed by administrative staff. At the end of December 2012, 91% compliance was achieved by all health providers and hospital staff. Sustainability has been possible over the years through ongoing hand hygiene campaigns. In the 5 years following the implementation of the program, hand hygiene compliance remained mostly below the 90% standard (Fig. 3). Conclusions: An intervention for continuous improvement and hand hygiene compliance using the WHO 5 Moments was implemented throughout 2018, (in addition to the In & Out program). This intervention also incorporated elements of the WHO Multimodal Strategy 1 to develop a comprehensive hand hygiene program together with new indicators. The ABC Medical Center, with the support and leadership of the Ministry of Health, aims to become an example of institutions that achieve national and international benchmarks in the implementation of patient safety programs that are not only successful but also sustainable.
Funding: None
Disclosures: None
Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia in a Mexican Tertiary Care Center Micro to Systemic Analysis: A 2017–2019 Case Series Study
- Miguel Ángel García Salcido, Roxana Trejo González, Lucio Antonio Hernández González
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- Journal:
- Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology / Volume 41 / Issue S1 / October 2020
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 November 2020, pp. s247-s248
- Print publication:
- October 2020
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Objectives: The aim of this study was to identify the biological, microbiological, and healthcare factors related to the occurrence of nosocomial pneumonia in our confirmed cases during 2017–2019. Methods: We conducted a case series study. For the selection of the cases we used the CDC criteria for hospital-acquired pneumonia, we collected cases from the data set for healthcare-associated infections from a tertiary-care hospital in Mexico City. For the quantitative analysis, we used Stata v14 software, and we obtained frequencies, proportions, accumulated incidence rate, lethality rate, central tendency, and dispersion metrics. This study was a secondary data set analysis; we obtained signed authorization for the use of the data from the Epidemiological Surveillance Unit. Results: During our analysis period (January 2017 to June 2019), we identified 107 cases that fulfilled the CDC criteria: 47 cases (43.93%) from 2017, 38 cases (35.51%) from 2018, and 20.56% from 2019. The month that reported the highest frequency was February, with 17 cases (15.89%). The median age was 63 years (range, 0–97 years; IQR, 36). The most affected age group was 65 years (48.60%), and the most affected 5-year age group was 75–79 years (13.08%). Moreover, 60 cases (56.07%) were men and 47 (43.93%) were women. Regarding the reason for discharge, 71% were discharged due to improvement, 27% died, and 2% were transferred to another healthcare facility. Also, 17 patients (15.89%) required readmission due to respiratory illness within 72 hours of previous discharge. The most common diagnosis was a solid malignant neoplasm (20.19%), followed by heart or vascular malformation or anomaly (12.50%). The mean inpatient hospital stay was 39.95 days (46.40; median, 27 days, range, 2–317 days; IQR 35 days). The median time elapsed until detection was 14 days. The hospitalization area with the most cases was the intensive care unit, with 24 cases (22.43%); the service with most cases was oncology with 21 cases (20.56%). The most isolated pathogen was Pseudomonas aeruginosa (14%). Moreover, 59% were gram-negative, 36% were gram-positive, 19.67% were viruses, and 14.75% were fungi. Our accumulated-incidence-rate was 0.58 cases per 1,000 patient days and our case-fatality-rate was 25.23%. Furthermore, 41% of cases required invasive mechanical ventilation, 52.34% required noninvasive mechanical ventilation, 5% cases had an endo-pleural tube, 9.35% had a nasogastric tube, and 41.12% had a central venous catheter. The most-prescribed antimicrobial was meropenem (33.33%), and meropenem-resistance was 61.54%. Conclusions: Infection prevention efforts should target oncological patients, critical-care units, and the elderly. We must reinforce our antimicrobial policy due to our overprescription of carbapenems. Early detection is needed to reduce mortality.
Funding: None
Disclosures: None