Title: Central Line Infections Avoidable Preventable
1Central 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
4HCAI 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
6WHAIP / 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
7What is a CVC infection?
- Definitions
- CDC
- Nosocomial Infection National Surveillance Scheme
(NINSS) - HELICS
8- European surveillance scheme
- Allows benchmarking across Europe
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10CVC surveillance introduced into mandatory HCAI
surveillance programme in Wales September
2007 VAP surveillance added September 2008
11Data collected on each patient with a CVC placed
on ICU or in-situ on arrival in ICU
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14CVC 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
15April 2008 April 2010
Reducing HCAI
16Content 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
17What 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.......
18What 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
19How 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
20Care 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
21Bundle 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
22What else is a bundle?
- Methodology to spread the use of generally
accepted science
23What else is a bundle?
- Methodology to spread the use of generally
accepted science - Provide a pressure for teamwork
24What else is a bundle?
- Methodology to spread the use of generally
accepted science - Provide a pressure for teamwork
- Simple, memorable checklist
25What else is a bundle?
- Methodology to spread the use of generally
accepted science - Provide a pressure for teamwork
- Simple, memorable checklist
- Audit tool
26What 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
27Bundles bridge the Guideline Gap
28What 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
29Types of Care Bundles
- Ventilator Care Bundle
- Sepsis Care Bundle
- Central Line Care Bundle
30CLC 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
31CLC 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
32How 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
33Results
- Structure in place
- Process in place
- ........... will result in the desired outcome
34Structure
- Staff
- Equipment
- Documentation
35Process Measure
- Compliance with all elements of the CLC Care
Bundle - (insertion and maintenance)
36Outcome Measure
- Avoid / reduce Central Line Catheter-Related
Blood Stream Infections (CLC-RBSI)
37 38How 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
39The 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
40What 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.
41The 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
42Use the PDSA Cycle for
- Testing or adapting an improvement change
- Implementing the change
- Spreading the change to the rest of your system
43Repeated 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
44Use a PDSA form to organize, standardize and
document your tests!
45Plan
- Clear objective
- State predictions
- Who, what, where, when?
- Describe data collection plan
46Do
- 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
47Study
- Complete the analysis of the data
- Analyse feedback or observations
- Compare data/feedback to predictions summarise
what was learned - Suggestions
48Act
- What will happen in the next PDSA cycle?
- Develop change further?
- Test?
- Implement?
49PDSA 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
50Multiple 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
51Multiple PDSA Cycles Directed Toward a Single Aim
AIM
Concept C
Concept D
Concept B
Concept A
Change Concepts, Theories, Ideas
52What 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
53UHW experience
54Structure and Process
Compliance with CLC Bundle
55Start small
1 doctor non-compliant
Lines Trolleys introduced
Dressing packs introduced
Compliance tick-box stickers
56Outcome
Zero CLC infections
57No 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
59Future challenges
Spread
60References 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.
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