| Literature DB >> 23421909 |
Hugo Sax1, Lauren Clack, Sylvie Touveneau, Fabricio da Liberdade Jantarada, Didier Pittet, Walter Zingg.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The implementation of evidence-based infection control practices is essential, yet challenging for healthcare institutions worldwide. Although acknowledged that implementation success varies with contextual factors, little is known regarding the most critical specific conditions within the complex cultural milieu of varying economic, political, and healthcare systems. Given the increasing reliance on unified global schemes to improve patient safety and healthcare effectiveness, research on this topic is needed and timely. The 'InDepth' work package of the European FP7 Prevention of Hospital Infections by Intervention and Training (PROHIBIT) consortium aims to assess barriers and facilitators to the successful implementation of catheter-related bloodstream infection (CRBSI) prevention in intensive care units (ICU) across several European countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23421909 PMCID: PMC3584730 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-8-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
PROHIBIT work packages and their objectives
| WP 1 | Project Management | Ensure that the project’s main scientific objectives are realized on schedule and on budget. |
| WP 2 | Systematic review of European guidelines for HAI-prevention, surveillance and public HAI reporting | Detect and analyze current guidelines and recommendations in European countries for HAI-prevention of HAI. In addition, this work package will review HAI surveillance activities and schemes and public HAI reporting efforts in European countries. |
| WP 3 | Survey of policy and practice for HAI-prevention in European hospitals | Assess the activity of European hospitals in HAI-prevention using a questionnaire of key determinants in a sample of hospitals in all European countries. |
| WP 4 (‘InDepth’) | In-depth qualitative investigation of success factors for adoption and implementation of infection prevention practices | Identify facilitators and barriers for successful adoption and implementation of evidence-based infection prevention practices by European hospitals. |
| WP 5 | Randomized effectiveness trial of two interventions to reduce catheter-related blood stream infections | Demonstrate the effectiveness of implementation of two interventions to prevent CRBSI: 1) the WHO hand hygiene promotion strategy and 2) a CRBSI prevention bundle. |
| WP 6 | Synthesis and dissemination | Provide tools for HAI-prevention to be used by stakeholders at multiple levels of health care systems. |
CRBSI, catheter-related bloodstream infection; HAI, healthcare-associated infection(s); WHO, World Health Organization.
PROHIBIT work package 5 (WP5) organization and interventions
| In each hospital, an onsite investigator has the primary responsibility for the local study-organization. Additionally, 0.5 full-time equivalent of a study nurse is paid by PROHIBIT who is responsible for performing CRBSI surveillance, measuring process outcomes, and implementing hand hygiene promotion and catheter care training, depending on which intervention package the hospital is randomized to. Study nurse received training in hand hygiene and CRBSI surveillance in Geneva, Switzerland. | |
| The study intervention includes focus group meetings with healthcare professionals of the participating hospitals (study nurses and intensive care physicians). Upon the meetings, the most recent evidence in CRBSI prevention and hand hygiene is delivered, and the participants will be trained in performing practical simulator training of catheter insertion and hand hygiene. Furthermore, a practical workshop on how to use a web-based e-learning tool for catheter care ( | |
| WHO hand hygiene promotion strategy based on materials designed by WHO and the University of Geneva Hospitals, Switzerland
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| CRBSI prevention bundle according to the Geneva model
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CRBSI, catheter-related bloodstream infection; CVC, central vascular catheter; WHO, World Health Organization.
Figure 1Temporal scheme of study procedures.
A typical ‘InDepth’ interview guide
| Personal career? | |
| | Role in the organization? |
| | Team environment and tasks? |
| What is your biggest challenge at work at this moment? | |
| Personal view of HAI? | |
| | Perception of HAI by others in the institution? |
| What were your past experiences with catheter-related bloodstream infections (CRBSI) or other HAI prevention, if any? | |
| | (If no CRBSI experience, any other suitable initiative to discuss implementation was addressed) |
| | Probing for implementation dimensions* |
| How did the institution decide to participate? | |
| Is leadership promoting patient safety? | |
| | Do collaborators dare to speak up in case of unsafe behavior? |
| | How are critical incidents handled? |
| Do you like working in this institution? What is great? | |
| | Who is important? |
| Staffing and other resources? |
* Probing is based on dimensions and constructs from implementation frameworks [28,37].
List of typical InDepthcriterion-selected interviewees
| Chief executive officer (CEO) | |
| | Director of nursing |
| | Medical director |
| Head of infection control program | |
| | Infection control practitioner(s)/nurse(s) |
| | Infection control physician(s) |
| | Epidemiologist(s) |
| | PROHIBIT onsite investigator |
| | PROHIBIT onsite study nurse |
| ICU head physician | |
| | ICU head nurse |
| ICU nurse(s), specialized or in training | |
| | ICU infection control link nurse |
| Physician(s), specialized or in training |
data collection process
| Sampling of candidates for interviews follows a ‘criterion strategy’
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| Interviews are approximately one hour long and follow a semi-structured format, according to a ‘general interview guide approach’
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| | Interview guides are prepared before each phase of the inquiry, listing questions and issues to be explored (Table
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| | Interview guides for the second series of site visits (one year after the launch of the initiative) will be designed according to the cross-case analysis of the first series and in line with potential suggestions from the literature at that point in time. |
| Ethnographic observations are useful as a tool for methodological triangulation. These direct, personal contacts, help us to better understand the context within which people interact, to obtain frank accounts from spontaneous, brief interviews, and to enrich data with a non-subjective view in agent behavior and sensemaking
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| Photography allows for documentation of rich, vivid accounts of the reality
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| During site visits, we collect artifacts such as guidelines, written protocols, data collection and audit forms. Often, these have to be translated for the analysis. |
‘InDepth’ case-level analysis scheme
| Debriefings are conducted following each stage of data collection, during which the involved researchers note main observations and establish a tentative list of predicted barriers, facilitators, and emerging themes. This information is then cross-briefed with the remaining researchers while still on-site. | |
| Following each visit, transcripts are read line-by-line by at least two researchers to identify recurring themes and to suggest relationships among them. These emerging themes are then discussed among all investigators to establish a list of main themes. | |
| Once the main themes for the site have been established, a process of open and axial coding
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| Once all theme memos are completed, they are discussed among all investigators to determine which themes are the most relevant to our central research questions and may have the most important implications on success or failure of the WP5 intervention. Relational ‘hypotheses’ are formulated about how concepts may relate in order to better understand phenomena taking place in the institution. All of this information is then compiled into a case report. | |
| The above case-level analysis is completed for each of the six hospitals prior to and following the intervention. By combining these approaches and by using a sensitizing scheme (being aware of existing evidence of barriers and facilitators for diffusion of innovation and implementation in organizations) for the preparation and execution of the inquiry and using a grounded approach (generating theory directly from the material) for the analysis, a multidimensional picture of structural, organizational and interpersonal contexts will emerge as a basis to define local and universal barriers and facilitators for infection control interventions. |