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CLABSI Tony Burrell

CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

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Page 1: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

CLABSI

Tony Burrell

Page 2: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Healthcare associated infections

• 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed days

• Increasing concerns about HAIs with emphasis on:o MROs and Antimicrobial Stewardship (AMS)o Hand Hygiene

• Vascular access devices common cause• CLABSI

o Attributable mortality – 12-25%o Significant increase in ICU LOSo Largely preventable

Page 3: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

ANZICS/ACSQHC initiative

• Acknowledges work in various states and individual ICUs• Aims to develop standardised approach nationally• Consistent surveillance definition and national database

using ANZICS CORE• Partnership between ANZICS and ACSQHC

Page 4: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Evidence

CLAB is preventable• Good evidence base going back 15 years

• Raad II, Hohn DC, Gilbreath BJ et al. Prevention of central venous catheter-related infections by using maximal sterile barrier precautions during insertion. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiology. 1994; 15:231-8

• Eggimann P Prevention of intravascular catheter infection. Curr Opin Infect Dis 2007; 20:360-369

• Berenholtz et al 2004. Eliminating catheter-related bloodstream infections in the intensive care unit. Crit Care Med 32 (10) 2014-2020.

• Quality not research

Page 5: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Major Collaboratives

• CLABSI rate was reduced to:• 1.36/1000 line days over a 4 year period in 69 ICUs in South Western

Pennsylvania CDC MMWR reported in JAMA 2006; 269-270

• 1.44/1000 line days in 46 ICUs in New York State Koll BS, Straub TA, Jalon HS et al Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf 2008; 34:713-723

• 1.7/1000 line days in 9 VA Hospitals, Midwest, US Bonello RS, Fletcher CE, Becker WK et al. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf 2008; 34:639-645

• 1.4/1000 (mean) line days in 103 ICUs in Michigan Pronovost et al NEJM 2006

• 0.6/1000 line days (down from 1.5/1000) in 20 ICUs in Hawaii Lin DM et al Am J Med Qual 2011 epub

• ‘Matching Michigan’

Page 6: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

NSW CLAB-ICU

• ‘Top down/bottom up’ project – NSW Intensive Care Coordination & Monitoring Unit and Clinical Excellence Commission

• 38 ICUs• Methodology modelled on the work of Pronovost et al.• The project promoted a standardised insertion technique

including: Hand washing Full barrier precautions during insertion Cleaning skin with chlorhexidine Avoiding femoral site if possible Removing unnecessary catheters

Burrell et al MJA 2011

Page 7: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Method

• Central Line Insertion Guidelines developed• Emphasis on aseptic technique• Insertion checklist• Data management established

– Completed checklist faxed to CEC – Teleform methodology

• Central Line Insertion Pack developed• ICCMU Nursing management guideline

Page 8: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Checklist detail

Page 9: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Checklist Compliance –– 10,890 line insertions July 07 – Dec 08

Competency assessed 48.3%

Hat, mask, eyewear 79.9%

Hands washed 2 mins 91.6%

Sterile gown/gloves 95.9%

Alcoholic chlorhexidine prep allowed to dry 95.8%

Entire patient draped 93.4%

Sterile technique maintained 95.6%

No multiple passes 80.9%

Confirm position radiologically 74.3%

Other method to confirm placement 43.6%

Page 10: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

For further analysis data from checklist divided into:

• ‘Clinician bundle’– Undertake competency assessment– Clean hands– Sterile gloves/gown– Hat, mask, protective eyewear

• ‘Patient bundle’ – Prep with 2% chlorhexidine & dry 2 mins– Large sterile drape– Maintain sterile technique– No multiple passes– Confirm catheter position

Page 11: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Jul-Sep 07 Oct-Dec 07 Jan-Mar 08 Apr-Jun 08 Jul-Sep 08 Oct-Dec 08

Clinician bundle complianceClinician bundle compliance excluding routine non-hat wearersPatient bundle complianceTotal

Page 12: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Results

Page 13: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Culture• Apathy

– ‘We don’t have CLABS’– Infection control reporting independently

• Impact of clinical leadership and support readily apparent and vice versa• ‘I don’t believe the evidence’

– Mistake promoting one high profile study – 4 ICUs refused to wear hats – Why fully drape the patient?– Excuse for not changing

• Data collection/reporting requirements – ‘Where’s the money? – excuse for not engaging in project, other ICUs used checklist but didn’t follow up lines or submit data

Page 14: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

HATS!!!

• ‘As in OT’ argument didn’t work• Not a lot in literature but found:

– Hair reservoir for organisms in proportion to length, oiliness & curliness– Clinicians acquire transient flora in hair

– Fletcher et al J Bone & Joint Surg 2007– Owers et al J Hosp Inf 2004– Nicolay Int J Surg 2006

• Studies linking hair to surgical site infection:– Mastro et al New Engl J Med 1990– Dineen, Drusin Lancet 1973– Summers et al J Clin Path 1965

• Studies linking max sterile barrier precautions to CLAB less clear:– Raad et al Inf Control & Hosp Epid 1994– Carrer et al Minerva Anesth 2005

Marghie Murgo, Eda Calabria CEC

Page 15: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Impact of compliance

• Non compliance with the ‘clinician bundle’: – relative risk of CLABSI was RR 1.62 (95% CI 1.1-2.4, p=0.0178)– For central lines RR 1.99 (95% CI 1.2-3.2 , p=0.0037)– For PICC RR 5.08 (95% CI 1.03-25 , p=0.059)– Dialysis catheters – no difference

• If compliant with both ‘clinician bundle’ and ‘patient bundle’ then risk of CLAB was RR 0.6 (95%CI 0.4-0.9, p=0.0103)

Page 16: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Survival analysis

• In non-referral ICUs lowest probability of CLABSI (1 in 100) was at day 3 in first 12 months – this was extended to day 8 in last 6 months

• In referral ICUs the lowest probability of CLABSI was extended from day 7 to day 9

• 75% central lines in place for less than 7 days• ‘Zero-risk’ (<1/1000 line days) is possible

– McLaws, Burrell Crit Care Med 2011 epub Oct

• Many ICUs do not have CLABSIs for months at a time• Other strategies ie BioPatch, coated catheters best reserved for

longterm lines, ICUs where CLABSI is a continuing problem

Page 17: CLABSI Tony Burrell. Healthcare associated infections 2009 – 175,153 estimated HAIs (5% admissions) cost Australian healthcare system 850,000 lost bed

Improvement multi-factorial

• Increased awareness of need for scrupulously aseptic insertion• Increasing compliance with clinician bundle (if non hat wearers excluded)• Not due to ↓femoral lines or ↓time in situ• Significantly better communication between intensive care & infection

control• Greater understanding of surveillance definition• Increasing ownership by intensive care clinicians following reporting of

individual ICU CLABSI data