Literature DB >> 19262569

Development of a statewide collaborative to decrease NICU central line-associated bloodstream infections.

J Schulman1, R L Stricof, T P Stevens, I R Holzman, E P Shields, R M Angert, R S Wasserman-Hoff, S M Nafday, L Saiman.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To characterize hospital-acquired bloodstream infection rates among New York State's 19 regional referral NICUs (at regional perinatal centers; RPCs) and develop strategies to promote best practices to reduce central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs). STUDY
DESIGN: During 2006 and 2007, RPC NICUs reported bloodstream infections, patient-days and central line-days to the Department of Health, and shared their results. Aiming to improve, participants created a central line-care bundle based on visiting a potentially best performing NICU and reviewing the literature. RESULT: All 19 RPCs participated in this quality initiative, contributing 218,096 patient-days and 56,911 central line-days of observation. Individual RPC nosocomial sepsis infection (NI) rates ranged from 1.0 to 5.8 NIs per 1000 patient-days (2006), and CLABSI rates ranged from 2.6 to 15.1 CLABSIs per 1000 central line-days (2007). A six-fold rate variation among RPC NICUs was observed. Participants unanimously approved a level-1 evidence-based central line-care bundle.
CONCLUSION: Individual RPC rates and consequent morbidity and resource use attributable to these infections were substantial and varied greatly. No center was without infections. It is hoped that the cooperation and accountability exhibited by the RPCs will result in a major network for characterizing performance and improving outcomes.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19262569     DOI: 10.1038/jp.2009.18

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Perinatol        ISSN: 0743-8346            Impact factor:   2.521


  6 in total

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2.  Nosocomial infection reduction in VLBW infants with a statewide quality-improvement model.

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Review 6.  NEC-zero recommendations from scoping review of evidence to prevent and foster timely recognition of necrotizing enterocolitis.

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  6 in total

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