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Central Line Infections Avoidable Preventable

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'When you can measure what you are speaking about, and ... Lines Trolleys introduced. Start small. Compliance tick-box stickers. Outcome. Zero CLC infections ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Central Line Infections Avoidable Preventable


1
Central Line InfectionsAvoidable? Preventable?
2
  • What is a CLC-RBSI?
  • Can we avoid them?
  • The IHI tools
  • The UHW experience

3
"When you can measure what you are speaking
about, and express it in numbers, you know
something about it." Lord Kelvin,
Popular Lectures and Addresses, 1889
4
HCAI Surveillance
  • In Wales the Welsh Assembly Government asked for
    the development of a mandatory HCAI surveillance
    programme for Critical Care in 2005

5
  • WCCIP established May 2006
  • Aim to introduce care bundles into Critical
    Care in Wales
  • CVC care bundle
  • VAP care bundle

6
WHAIP / WCCIP collaboration
  • Development of surveillance programme to underpin
    the improvement work.
  • Agreed definitions together
  • All critical care units in Wales engaged and
    conducting surveillance in advance of the scheme
    becoming mandatory

7
What is a CVC infection?
  • Definitions
  • CDC
  • Nosocomial Infection National Surveillance Scheme
    (NINSS)
  • HELICS

8
  • European surveillance scheme
  • Allows benchmarking across Europe

9
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10
CVC surveillance introduced into mandatory HCAI
surveillance programme in Wales September
2007 VAP surveillance added September 2008
11
Data collected on each patient with a CVC placed
on ICU or in-situ on arrival in ICU
12
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13
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14
CVC Surveillance Results Sep 07 Dec 08
Patients in Wales in ICU with lines inserted
between 01/09/07 31/12/08
Provisional Data from the National Mandatory HCAI
surveillance programme, Wales - WHAIP team NPHS
15
April 2008 April 2010
Reducing HCAI
16
Content Areas
  • Improving leadership for quality
  • Reducing healthcare associated infections
  • Improving critical care
  • Improving medicines management
  • Reducing surgical complications
  • Improving general medical and surgical care
  • Development Sites
  • Trusts Only

Reducing HCAI
17
What can cause CVC infection?
  • Poor insertion hygiene
  • Poor insertion technique
  • Lack of appropriate skills
  • Poor line maintenance
  • Lines remaining in place for an inappropriate
    length of time
  • Use of 3 way taps.......

18
What is the cost to the patient?
  • CLC-RBSIs are a major cause of morbidity
  • A 2006 prevalence survey found that 42.3 of
    bloodstream infections in England are central
    line-related
  • National Audit Office (2000) estimated the
    additional cost of a bloodstream infection to be
    6,209 per patient

19
How to avoid/prevent Line Infections
  • Standardise practice
  • Practice variation is the enemy of quality
  • Measure our practice and outcomes
  • Know the extent of the problem in order to show
    improvement over time
  • Develop a checklist model...... Care Bundle
  • It makes the right thing to do the easy thing to
    do

20
Care bundles explained
  • A global standard of care management
  • A group of interventions related to a disease
    process that when implemented together result in
    better outcomes than when implemented
    individually
  • Bundle components can easily be measured as
    completed or not completed all-or-none
    compliance

21
Bundle Aim
  • To eliminate the piecemeal application of
    evidence-based guidelines that characterises the
    majority of clinical environments today
  • To make it easier for clinicians to bring
    guidelines into practice

22
What else is a bundle?
  • Methodology to spread the use of generally
    accepted science

23
What else is a bundle?
  • Methodology to spread the use of generally
    accepted science
  • Provide a pressure for teamwork

24
What else is a bundle?
  • Methodology to spread the use of generally
    accepted science
  • Provide a pressure for teamwork
  • Simple, memorable checklist

25
What else is a bundle?
  • Methodology to spread the use of generally
    accepted science
  • Provide a pressure for teamwork
  • Simple, memorable checklist
  • Audit tool

26
What else is a bundle?
  • Methodology to spread the use of generally
    accepted science
  • Provide a pressure for teamwork
  • Simple, memorable checklist
  • Audit tool
  • All aspects should be done to get the maximum
    benefit

27
Bundles bridge the Guideline Gap
28
What makes a bundle so special?
  • The power of a bundle
  • science behind it
  • method of execution with complete consistency 
  • The changes in a bundle are not new theyre well
    established best practices, but theyre often not
    performed uniformly, making treatment unreliable
  • A bundle ties the changes together into a package
    of interventions that people know must be
    followed for
  • every patient
  • every single time

29
Types of Care Bundles
  • Ventilator Care Bundle
  • Sepsis Care Bundle
  • Central Line Care Bundle

30
CLC Bundle.....insertion
  • Hand hygiene
  • Decontaminate hands before and after each patient
    contact
  • Use correct hand hygiene procedure
  • Maximal barrier precautions
  • PPE
  • Single use gloves
  • Eye/face protection
  • Aseptic technique
  • Sterile gown, gloves and full body drape
  • Chlorhexidine skin antisepsis (2 Chlorhexidine
    Gluconate in 70 Isopropyl Alchohol)
  • Catheter
  • Optimal catheter site selection, with subclavian
    vein as the preferred site for non-tunnelled
    catheters
  • Single lumen unless indicated otherwise
  • Consider antimicrobial impregnated catheter if
    duration of 1-3 weeks and risk of CLC-RBSI high

31
CLC Bundle....maintenance
  • Hand hygiene
  • Decontaminate hands before and after each patient
    contact
  • Use correct hand hygiene procedure
  • Catheter site inspection
  • Regular observation for signs of infection ie.
    leakage, inflammation etc AT LEAST DAILY
  • Dressing
  • A sterile, transparent, semi-permeable dressing
    should be in place
  • Ensure dressing is intact and dry
  • Catheter access
  • Aseptic technique swabbing ports/hubs with 2
    Chlorhexedine prior to access
  • Administration set replacement
  • Following administration of blood/blood products
    immediately
  • Following TPN after 24 hours or 72 hours if no
    lipids
  • All other fluid sets after 72 hours
  • TPN should be infused via dedicated lumen
  • Daily review of line necessity with prompt
    removal of unnecessary lines

32
How to measure
  • 1. Hand hygiene Yes No
  • (hands washed alcohol gel used)
  • 2. Maximal barrier precautions on insertion Yes
    No
  • (user cap, mask, sterile gown, sterile
    gloves
  • patient covered with large sterile drape)
  • 3. Chlorhexidine skin antisepsis Yes No
  • 4. Optimal catheter site selection Yes No
  • (document site in notes reason for site
    selection)
  • 5. Daily review documentation of line
    necessity Yes No
  • (To be documented in patients notes)
  • 6. Ultra sound used for insertion Yes No

Central Line Care Bundle
33
Results
  • Structure in place
  • Process in place
  • ........... will result in the desired outcome

34
Structure
  • Staff
  • Equipment
  • Documentation

35
Process Measure
  • Compliance with all elements of the CLC Care
    Bundle
  • (insertion and maintenance)

36
Outcome Measure
  • Avoid / reduce Central Line Catheter-Related
    Blood Stream Infections (CLC-RBSI)

37
  • S P O

38
How do we achieve reliable improvements to our
systems?
  • Implementing evidence-based changes to improve
    patient outcomes
  • Set time frames......how much, by when?
  • Getting the data to show what impact the changes
    are having
  • Spread

39
The Three Fundamental Questions for Improvement
  • What are we trying to accomplish?
  • How will we know that a change is an improvement?
  • What changes can we make that will result in
    improvement?

Source, API The Improvement Guide, p. 10
40
What are we trying to accomplish?
When you combine the 3 questions with the PDSA
cycle, you get
How will we know that a change is an improvement?
What change can we make that will result in
improvement?
the Model for Improvement.
41
The PDSA Cycle for Learning and
Improvement
Act
Plan
  • Objective
  • Questions
  • predications (why)
  • Plan to carry out the cycle
  • (who, what, where, when)
  • Plan for data collection
  • What changes
  • are to be made?
  • Next cycle?

Study
Do
  • Complete the
  • analysis of the data
  • Compare data to
  • predictions
  • Summarize
  • what was
  • learned
  • Carry out the plan
  • Document problems
  • and unexpected
  • observations
  • Begin analysis
  • of the data

42
Use the PDSA Cycle for
  • Testing or adapting an improvement change
  • Implementing the change
  • Spreading the change to the rest of your system

43
Repeated Use of the PDSA Cycle
Changes That Result in Improvement
DATA
Implementation of Change
Hunches, theories, best practices
Wide-Scale Tests of Change
Sequential building of knowledge under a wide
range of conditions
Follow-up Tests
Very Small Scale Test
44
Use a PDSA form to organize, standardize and
document your tests!
45
Plan
  • Clear objective
  • State predictions
  • Who, what, where, when?
  • Describe data collection plan

46
Do
  • Attempt to carry out plan
  • Document any problems or unexpected events
  • Collect planned data
  • Capture feedback or observations from those
    conducting the plan
  • Suggestions to improve in the DO phase of the PDSA

47
Study
  • Complete the analysis of the data
  • Analyse feedback or observations
  • Compare data/feedback to predictions summarise
    what was learned
  • Suggestions

48
Act
  • What will happen in the next PDSA cycle?
  • Develop change further?
  • Test?
  • Implement?

49
PDSA example CLC Care Bundle
Routine use of CLC Bundle
DATA
Cycle 4 Repeat using 6 patients
Cycle 3 Repeat using 2 patients, doctors/nurses
for 1 week
Cycle 2 Repeat using 2 patients and 2
doctors/nurses for 2 days
CLC Bundle
Cycle 1 1 Doctor/1 Nurse / 1 patient/1 day use
of Chlorhexedine 2
50
Multiple PDSA Cycles Running on Parallel Ramps
with Multiple Aims
Testing and adaptation
Alcohol gel each bed area
Coloured aprons
Use of Chlorhexedine 2
Stricter visiting times
Change Concepts
51
Multiple PDSA Cycles Directed Toward a Single Aim
AIM
Concept C
Concept D
Concept B
Concept A
Change Concepts, Theories, Ideas
52
What can you accomplish by Tuesday? It all
depends on the size and scope of the planned
change!
Start small
1 patient, 1 nurse, 1 doctor, 1 day
53
UHW experience
54
Structure and Process
Compliance with CLC Bundle
55
Start small
1 doctor non-compliant
Lines Trolleys introduced
Dressing packs introduced
Compliance tick-box stickers
56
Outcome
Zero CLC infections
57
No agreed definition
National surveillance in Wales
HELICS agreed
58
  • A fundamental tenet of improvement in any
    industry is that if you want to improve you must
    develop a system to evaluate performance

59
Future challenges
Spread
60
References on Measurement and Improvement
  • Brook, R. et. al. Health System Reform and
    Quality. Journal of the American Medical
    Association 276, no. 6 (1996) 476-480.
  • Carey, R. and Lloyd, R. Measuring Quality
    Improvement in healthcare A Guide to Statistical
    Process Control Applications. ASQ Press,
    Milwaukee, WI, 2001.
  • Langley, G. et. al. The Improvement Guide.
    Jossey-Bass Publishers, San Francisco, 1996.
  • Lloyd, R. Quality Health Care A Guide to
    Developing and Using Indicators. Jones and
    Bartlett Publishers, Sudbury, MA, 2004.
  • Nelson, E. et al, Report Cards or Instrument
    Panels Who Needs What? Journal of Quality
    Improvement, Volume 21, Number 4, April, 1995.
  • Solberg. L. et. al. The Three Faces of
    Performance Improvement Improvement,
    Accountability and Research. Journal of Quality
    Improvement 23, no.3 (1997) 135-147.\
  • Associate in Process Improvement. The Improvement
    Handbook Models, Methods and Tools for
    Improvement, Austin, TX, January 2005.

61
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