| Literature DB >> 23587259 |
Barbara W Trautner1, Rupal D Bhimani, Amber B Amspoker, Sylvia J Hysong, Armandina Garza, P Adam Kelly, Velma L Payne, Aanand D Naik.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Overtreatment of catheter-associated bacteriuria is a quality and safety problem, despite the availability of evidence-based guidelines. Little is known about how guidelines-based knowledge is integrated into clinicians' mental models for diagnosing catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CA-UTI). The objectives of this research were to better understand clinicians' mental models for CA-UTI, and to develop and validate an algorithm to improve diagnostic accuracy for CA-UTI.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23587259 PMCID: PMC3664217 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-13-48
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Components of Clinicians’ Mental Models Diagnosis of Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI)
| Fever | Pyuria (white blood cells in urine) |
| Delirium | Foul smelling urine |
| Rigors | Change in urine color |
| Flank pain | Sediment in urine |
| Acute hematuria (red blood cells in urine) | Systemic leukocytosis (higher than normal white blood cell count) |
| Pelvic discomfort | Prior “UTI” diagnosis |
| Urgency | Resistant organism in urine |
| Frequency | Vague malaise |
| Dysuria | Weakness |
| Suprapubic pain | Type of organism in urine |
Characteristics of study participants
| | ||
|---|---|---|
| Female gender | 7 (70) | 4 (67%) |
| Occupation | | |
| Physician | 6 (60) | 4 (67%) |
| Physician’s Assistant | 2 (20) | 1 (17%) |
| Nurse Practitioner | 2 (20) | 1 (17%) |
| Duration of Clinical Experience | ||
| 1-5 years | 1 (10) | 4 (67%) |
| 6-10 years | 3 (30) | |
| 11-15 years | 5 (50) | 2 (33%) |
| >15 years | 1 (10) |
Description of bacteriuria cases diagnosed by long-term care providers and signs/symptoms endorsed
| >105 CFU/mL | CA-ABU | Systemic leukocytosis, receiving systemic corticosteroids | 6 (60%) | Urinary symptoms incorrectly identified as present (1) | Pyuria (5) | |
| Lack of fever (6) | Leukocytosis (7) | |||||
| | Elderly/frail patient (5) | |||||
| | Weakness (3) | |||||
| | Organism number (1) | |||||
| <104 CFU/mL gram positive organisms | CA-UTI | Fever of 103.3 degrees, and no other source identified | 4 (40%) | Lack of urinary symptoms (2) | Pyuria (3) | |
| | Leukocytosis (4) | |||||
| Fever (6) | Organism type (3) | |||||
| Delirium (3) | Elderly/frail patient (5) | |||||
| Hematuria (3) | Isolated Organisms (3) | |||||
| >105 CFU/mL | CA-ABU | Leg weakness, no symptoms of urinary tract infection | 1 (10%) | | Pyuria (3) | |
| Leukocytosis (7) | ||||||
| Organism type (6) | ||||||
| Elderly/frail patient (5) | ||||||
| Weakness (6) | ||||||
| Patient fall (5) | ||||||
| History of UTIs (3) | ||||||
| >105 CFU/mL | CA-ABU | No symptoms of urinary tract infection | 10 (100%) | Presence of respiratory symptoms [alternate cause] (4) | Lack of leukocytosis/mild Leukocytosis (3) | |
| Lack of fever (3) | Organism type (6) | |||||
| Intact mental status (2) | Elderly/frail patient [likely to colonized candida] (3) | |||||
| No urinary symptoms (2) | | |||||
| 21 (53%) | Leukocytosis, pyuria, frailty cited by 3-7 respondents in every case | |||||
CA-ABU= catheter associated asymptomatic bacteriuria, CA-UTI catheter associated urinary tract infection.
Figure 1Final form of the comprehensive algorithm. This figure represents two sides, front and back, of a pocket card used in our guidelines implementation project, “Kicking CAUTI Campaign.”
Ratings of the diagnostic algorithm by expert members of the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) guidelines panel for diagnosing and managing catheter associated bacteriuria
| Questions posed to IDSA guidelines panel members | Does the algorithm appropriately reflect the definition of CA-UTI as per the IDSA guidelines? | Does the algorithm reflect an appropriate approach to diagnosis and treatment of CAUTI vs. ABU, as recommended by the IDSA CAUTI guidelines? | Could you apply this algorithm to your own catheterized inpatients? |
| Experts’ ratings, mean (standard deviation) | 8.1 ( | 7.1 ( | 8.0 ( |
(N=7).
Ratings were based on 10-point numerical scale with higher numbers indicating stronger agreement.