3 results
Quality improvement approach for surgical-site infection prevention in a Philippine provincial hospital
- Anthony Abustan, Unarose Hogan, Julie Winn, Paul Pagaran, Joan Littlefield, Ted Miles
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- Journal:
- Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology / Volume 3 / Issue S2 / June 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 29 September 2023, pp. s97-s98
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Background: Globally, the 30-day cumulative incidence of surgical-site infections (SSI) was 11% (95% CI, 10%–13%) based on the systematic review and meta-analysis derived from 57 studies. SSIs are poorly studied in the Philippines. Americares and its hospital partner, Camarines Norte Provincial Hospital, Philippines, sought to reduce SSIs through (1) establishing SSI surveillance in the hospitals’ surgical departments, (2) implementing quality improvement processes, and (3) developing and implementing an SSI prevention care bundle. Methods: A quality improvement methodology was used to introduce SSI surveillance and care-bundle checklist in partnership with Americares. Using paired t tests, pre- and posttest scores of the SSI care bundle training were analyzed. SSI surveillance was established based on the adapted CDC criteria. All clean surgeries were monitored except orthopedic surgeries. The number of surgeries performed, monitored, and SSIs identified were documented using the surveillance forms and plotted using Microsoft Excel software. A care bundle based on WHO evidence-based interventions for SSI prevention was designed and implemented. Compliance with the SSI care bundle was documented using Microsoft Excel. The relationship between the use of a care bundle and SSIs was analyzed using the Pearson correlation coefficient. Results: An online SSI care bundle training session was conducted. Overall, 150 participants had a mean pretraining test score of +6.46. After the training was conducted, the same participants had a mean posttraining test score of + 1.76). a statistically significant increase of 5.29 (95% CI). Thereby, the mean score difference after training showed that knowledge increased overall. These findings show an average of 90.43% compliance with the SSI care-bundle checklist over the 18-month window from May 2021 to November 2022. From a baseline of 0%, compliance increased from 80% upon its introduction in May 2021. Lastly, the SSI incidence rate from May 2021to November 2022 averaged 1.89%. The days between reported SSIs averaged 16.85. No baseline was available for comparison prior to the introduction of the surveillance and care bundle. A Pearson r data analysis (n = 1,850) was used to determine the relationship between the use of the care bundle and SSIs. The data illustrated a moderate negative correlation (r = −.31). Therefore, higher care-bundle compliance yielded fewer SSI cases. Conclusions: The use of an evidence-based care bundle paired with a local quality improvement process significantly improved SSI prevention and surveillance. Future studies are needed that include clean-contaminated, contaminated, and dirty surgical cases to test the degree of SSI reduction possible.
Disclosures: None
SG-APSIC1040: Implementing a quality-improvement approach to surgical-site infection prevention in the Philippines
- Anthony Abustan, Arnel Francisco, Maria Teresa Andrade, Julie Winn, Paul Gwyn Pagaran, Ted Miles, Joan Littlefield, Unarose Hogan
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- Journal:
- Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology / Volume 3 / Issue S1 / February 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 16 March 2023, pp. s30-s31
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Objectives: We aimed to reduce surgical site infections in Camarines Norte Provincial Hospital, Philippines, (1) by establishing SSI surveillance in the surgical departments, (2) by implementing quality improvement processes, and (3) by developing and implementing an SSI prevention care bundle. Methods: In partnership with Americares, SSI surveillance based on CDC criteria was instituted for all surgeries, excluding orthopedic surgeries. Staff were trained in applying quality-improvement methodology, infection prevention and control, and SSI prevention. A care bundle based on the WHO evidence-based interventions for SSI prevention was designed. Interventions included preoperative bathing, surgical hand preparation, intraoperative surgical-site preparation using 2% chlorhexidine isopropanol solution, and postoperative wound management. The model for improvement methodology was used to implement these changes for 12 months from May 2020 to May 2021. Results: In total, 718 surgeries were followed for SSI surveillance, with an average of 58 surgical patients per month in 2020, which increased to 90 patients per month in 2021. In 2020, the SSI incidence rate was 1.76%, and this rate increased 38.64% to 2.44% in 2021. A statistically significant increase in knowledge of 5.29 points (95% CI, 4.91–5.67) among 150 participants undergoing SSI training between pretest (+6.46) and posttest (+ 11.76) was achieved. SSI care-bundle checklists were used for 80% of eligible surgical patients by 2021. Compliance with the SSI care-bundle checklist increased from 0 to 87.69% (n = 718) by October 2021, subsequently decreasing by 2.75% by December 2021. Conclusions: A quality-improvement process embedded in routine surgical care can be a building block for reducing SSIs. However, we did not achieve an overall decrease in SSIs, likely due to increased reporting of SSIs through improved SSI surveillance. However, important gains were achieved in improved healthcare worker knowledge and practice through the implementation of an SSI care bundle. Fluctuations in checklist compliance reflected COVID-19 surges.
Piloting a Quality Improvement Intervention for Urinary Catheter Removal to Reduce Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection in a Medical Intensive Care Unit
- Dinh Thi Thu Huong, Ha Quang Doan, Phu Dinh Vu, Nga Nguyen, Vasquez Amber, Ha Tran Thi Thu, Lan Nguyen Thi Phong, Unarose Hogan, Lien Thi Le, Trang Thi Nguyen, Thuong Thi Nguyen
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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. s352-s353
- Print publication:
- October 2020
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Background: Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) are among the most prevalent healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) globally, contributing to increased morbidity, prolonged hospital stays, and increased healthcare costs. Interventions that support prompt removal of the urinary catheter are evidence-based actions to effectively reduce CAUTI rates.1Objective: At the National Hospital of Tropical Disease (NHTD), catheter removal interventions in the intensive care unit (ICU) were implemented using quality improvement (QI) methodology to reduce CAUTI incidence and urinary catheter device utilization. Methods: Training was performed for ICU clinical staff with knowledge checks before and after the program. A bedside visual reminder of CAUTI risk and checklist to assess catheter need were implemented. Weekly compliance of provided visual reminders and checklists were measured using a simple audit tool. Device utilization ratios (DURs, ratios of device days to patient days), and CAUTI incidence rates (per 1,000 device days) were collected at baseline (July–September 2018) and quarterly thereafter until June 2019. Statistical significance was determined by an independent t test. Results: In the first quarter (October–December 2018), the CAUTI incidence rate decreased from 8.9 to 1.3 per 1,000 device days (P = .036). The ICU staff trained in CAUTI prevention, mean knowledge scores before and after training increased from 68% to 87%. The DUR decreased slightly from 0.59 to 0.55 after the first-quarter training then steadily increased in the following quarter (0.60; January–March 2019) and after the intervention (0.54; April–June 2019). CAUTI incidence rates also increased but were still lower than at baseline: 4.8 and 6.3 per 1,000 days of device use. Compliance of reminders was 51% during the first quarter, increased slightly in the second quarter 62%, then decreased to 40% during the last quarter. The nurses’ adherence to the daily checklist remained stable (>75%). Conclusions: This CAUTI prevention project was the first use of quality improvement methodology to implement change at NHTD. A trend decrease in CAUTI was observed, though a greater decrease occurred at the beginning of the intervention. Limited compliance of daily reminders is likely reflected in no statistically significant decrease in DUR. Possibly, this quality improvement project raised awareness among clinicians to improve general CAUTI prevention practices in the ICU without decreasing DUR. Given limited compliance with reminder and checklists, the intervention will be revised during the next PDSA cycle to improve adherence.
1Meddings J, Rogers MA, Krein SL, Fakih MG, Olmsted RN, Saint S. Reducing unnecessary urinary catheter use and other strategies to prevent catheter-associated urinary tract infection: an integrative review. BMJ Qual Saf 2014;23:277–289.
Funding: None
Disclosures: None