| Literature DB >> 26380336 |
Brian Duerden1, Carole Fry2, Alan P Johnson3, Mark H Wilcox4.
Abstract
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) blood stream infection (BSI) is a major healthcare burden in some but not all healthcare settings, and it is associated with 10%-20% mortality. The introduction of mandatory reporting in England of MRSA BSI in 2001 was followed in 2004 by the setting of target reductions for all National Health Service hospitals. The original national target of a 50% reduction in MRSA BSI was considered by many experts to be unattainable, and yet this goal has been far exceeded (∼80% reduction with rates still declining). The transformation from endemic to sporadic MRSA BSI involved the implementation of serial national infection prevention directives, and the deployment of expert improvement teams in organizations failed to meet their improvement trajectory targets. We describe and appraise the components of the major public health infection prevention campaign that yielded major reductions in MRSA infection. There are important lessons and opportunities for other healthcare systems where MRSA infection remains endemic.Entities:
Keywords: healthcare-associated infections
Year: 2015 PMID: 26380336 PMCID: PMC4567090 DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofv035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Forum Infect Dis ISSN: 2328-8957 Impact factor: 3.835
Figure 1.Numbers of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) blood stream infections (BSIs) reported in England, 1990–2012. Vertical arrows indicate notable interventions aimed at reducing MRSA BSIs: 1, introduction of mandatory reporting of MRSA BSIs; 2, launch of national report targeting 7 key areas for improvement (active surveillance and investigation, infection risks associated with medical devices, reservoirs of infection, standards of hygiene in clinical practice, prudent use of antimicrobials, management and organization, and research and development; 3, launch of the cleanyourhands campaign to improve the standard of hand hygiene, which required alcohol hand gel to be available, as a minimum, at all points of patient contact; 4, launch of MRSA/Cleaner Hospitals Improvement Programme and, in November 2004, announcement of mandatory target to halve the number of MRSA BSIs in hospitals in England by 2008; 5, legislation was introduced in 2006, which implemented a statutory Code of Practice on healthcare-associated infection (HCAI) that applied to all National Health Service (NHS) healthcare providers; 6, in late 2007 a series of additional measures was added, including a requirement for quarterly reporting on HCAIs to hospital Boards, an extension of the cleanyourhands campaign, and a legal requirement for hospital Chief Executives to report MRSA BSIs (and Clostridium difficile infections) centrally more frequently (within 2 weeks of each following month); 7, start of significant reductions in cephalosporin and fluoroquinolone prescribing in hospitals; 8, MRSA screening implementation guidance was issued during 2008, stating that screening of elective and emergency admissions should be occurring by March 2009 and December 2010, respectively.
Chronology of Key Events in MRSA BSI Control Program in England
| Date | Initiative | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| March 1998 | House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology report “Resistance to antibiotics and other antimicrobial agents” [ | Recommended that the NHS should set itself targets for controlling MRSA in hospitals and publish its achievements; also that infection control and hygiene should be at the heart of good hospital management and practice, and that resources should be redirected accordingly. |
| February 2000 | National Audit Office (NAO) 1st report: The management and control of HAI in acute NHS Trusts in England [ | Surveyed infection control teams (ICTs) believed that 15% reduction in HAI was achievable. NAO observed that there “may be a growing mismatch between what is expected of ICTs in controlling infection and the staffing and other resources allocated to them”. |
| June 2000 | UK antimicrobial resistance strategy and action plan [ | Areas for action included surveillance, prudent antimicrobial use, and infection control. It was stated that the Department of Health would lead the development of performance standards and targets for HAI (including MRSA) for England and Wales. |
| November 2000 | Committee of Public Accounts 42nd report of session 1999–2000. The management and control of hospital acquired infection in acute NHS Trusts in England [ | Two main conclusions: (1) the NHS did not have a grip on the extant of HAI; and (2) a root and branch shift towards prevention was needed at all levels and that a philosophy that prevention is everybody's business not just the specialists. |
| January 2001 | National Evidence-Based Guidelines for Preventing Healthcare-Associated Infections in NHS Hospitals in England (EPIC 1) published [ | First systematic review of the evidence to support interventions to reduce HCAI. |
| April 2001 | National Standards of Cleanliness – NHS Estates [ | Outcome-based standards to improve cleanliness. It was recognized that cleaning staff had an important role in quality improvement. |
| April 2001 | Introduction of mandatory surveillance for MRSA BSIs. Department of Health. Surveillance of healthcare associated infections, CMO's Update 30 [ | Minimum dataset to be collected by acute hospitals in England: (1) the total number of blood culture sets taken; (2) the total number of positive blood cultures; (3) the total number of blood cultures positive for |
| January 2002 | Getting ahead of the curve: a strategy for infectious diseases [ | Recommended the establishment of the Health Protection Agency (HPA). Infectious disease control needed to be transformed from a “Cinderella service” by bringing into the mainstream of service development. Used the term “HCAI” instead of “HAI”. |
| June 2003 | Surveillance of healthcare associated infections [ | From July 2003, mandatory MRSA bacteremia data to be the basis of a performance management indicator. Data from the 2 most recent years were to provide each Trust with an “improvement score” as part of a balanced scorecard, which contributed to star ratings of each acute hospital Trust. |
| June 2003 | Hospital Pharmacy initiative for promoting prudent use of antibiotics in hospitals [ | ∼£12 million was allocated for 3 years from 2003 to 2004 to pump prime clinical pharmacy initiatives around antimicrobial prescribing in acute NHS hospital trust. Funding often used to employ “antimicrobial pharmacists”. |
| December 2003 | Winning Ways: working together to reduce healthcare associated infection in England [ | Set a clear direction for the NHS on actions to reduce the relatively high levels of particular HCAIs. Trusts were required to designate a Director for Infection Prevention and Control. |
| July 2004 | Towards cleaner hospitals and lower rates of infection [ | Hospital cleanliness remained a major patient concern, and MRSA was a growing problem. The 2 issues were considered to be linked (from a public perspective). |
| August 2004 | Rapid Review Panel established. Recommendation from Winning Ways [ | The panel provided a prompt assessment of new and novel equipment, materials, products, or protocols that may be of value to the NHS in improving hospital infection control and reducing HCAI. |
| July 2004 | National Standards Local Action - Health and Social Care Standards and Planning Framework 2005/2006–2007/2008 [ | Healthcare organizations were charged to keep patients, staff, and visitors safe by having systems to ensure that the risk of HCAI is reduced, with particular emphasis on high standards of hygiene and cleanliness, and achieving year-on-year reductions in MRSA (a target for MRSA reduction to be set for each NHS hospital Trust). |
| July 2004 | NAO 2nd report: Improving patient care by reducing the risk of HAI [ | Noted that: the number of MRSA bacteremias had increased since mandatory surveillance had been introduced, but the data did not enable clinicians to identify and reduce risks within their specialty; welcomed the publication of Winning Ways; 80% of Trust Chief Executives reported that they had made changes to their infection control arrangements since 2000, one key driver being controls assurance. |
| September 2004 | NPSA patient safety alert about hand hygiene [ | Instructed NHS trusts to install alcohol-based hand rub at the point of care. Signaled the piloting of the cleanyourhands campaign. |
| October 2004 | A Matron's Charter: an action plan for cleaner hospitals [ | Emphasized the role of hospital cleanliness as an integral part of infection control. All staff working in healthcare to receive education in infection control. |
| November 2004 | Introduction of mandatory target to reduce MRSA bloodstream infections in hospitals [ | The Secretary of State for Health announces a target to halve the number of MRSA BSIs in hospitals by March 2008, using 2003–2004 as baseline. (Actually, this was a 60% reduction target for most trusts [20% per year for 3 consecutive years] because those with few or none could contribute little to national [50% reduction] target.) |
| January 2005 | MRSA/HCAI/Cleanliness Improvement Programme [ | Originally focused on the 20 most challenged Trusts with respect to MRSA BSI rates. Became the HCAI and Cleanliness Improvement Programme, aiming to (1) support hospital trusts and NHS organizations to reduce MRSA BSIs and (2) improve public and patient confidence in the NHS. |
| April 2005 | Office for National Statistics (ONS) Report: Deaths involving MRSA: England and Wales, 1999–2003 [ | The first ONS report on deaths relating to MRSA. MRSA accounted for 66% of death certificates that mentioned |
| June 2005 | Saving Lives – a delivering program to reduce healthcare associated infection, including MRSA [ | Focused on practice measures to reduce MRSA BSIs: high-impact interventions were produced to improve the reliability of clinical practice in a number of areas, including antimicrobial prescribing and the insertion and maintenance of invasive devices, to minimize the risk of HCAI. |
| June 2005 | Introduction of monthly MRSA BSI reporting [ | Reporting required by 15th of each following month. Publication of data summaries increased in frequency from annual to twice a year. |
| October 2005 | Introduction of Mandatory MRSA bacteremia enhanced surveillance scheme [ | MRSA surveillance scheme enhanced to capture comprehensive data via a web-enabled data capture system on individual cases of MRSA bacteremia, including: patient demographics; date of admission; date of bacteremia; location at time of blood culture; consultant specialty; type of clinical care at the time the blood sample was taken. |
| May 2006 | Going further faster: implementing the Saving Lives delivery program [ | Guidance to support the delivery of the MRSA target and the Saving Lives program. The focus was on actions that could impact on MRSA, but these would also support system-wide improvement in HCAI. |
| 1 June 2006 | Introduction of root cause analysis toolkit (NPSA) [ | An action tool for clinicians and risk managers to use when a patient had a life-threatening infection, such as MRSA bacteremia. This helped clinical teams to identify (1) what factors or events led to the infection and (2) how to reduce the risks of it happening again. |
| October 2006 | The Health Act 2006: Code of Practice for the prevention and control of healthcare associated infections [ | Legal requirement for managers of NHS organizations to deliver low HCAI risk for patients. Failure to observe the Code could result in either an Improvement Notice issued by the Healthcare Commission or the organization being reported for significant failings and placed on special measures. |
| November 2006 | Summary of best practice for MRSA screening [ | Trusts recommended to consider models for screening and decolonization of high-risk patients (A&E and ICU admissions, and some groups preoperative surgical patients, eg, elective orthopedic, cardiothoracic, neurosurgical). |
| February 2007 | EPIC 2 published [ | Updated evidence-based guidance on standard precautions and the insertion and optimal management of CVCs and UCs. |
| June 2007 | Clean, safe care: reducing infections and saving lives [ | A progress report on what had been achieved and what still needed to be done. The NHS was on track to achieve the MRSA target. The Healthcare Commission begins its program of unannounced inspections of NHS trusts against the Code of Practice. |
| July 2007 | £50 million additional funding for reducing healthcare associated infections [ | Additional one-off funding to be spent promptly to achieve rapid results on reducing HCAIs. Front-line staff were expected to be involved in the decision making and be kept informed of where the additional money was been spent. Each Strategic Health Authority received £5 m to allocate to NHS organizations. |
| September 2007 | Uniforms and work wear: An evidence base for developing local policy [ | Widely known as the “bare below the elbows” guidance, this was widely adopted throughout the NHS. It supported the requirements of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 Code of Practice relating to the need for uniform and workwear policies to support effective hand hygiene. |
| November 2007 | Deep Clean campaign announced [ | The government announced £57.5 m for deep cleaning throughout Trusts between December 2007 and March 2008. Later NAO report estimated that £62.6 m was spent on Deep Clean campaign. Trust Directors of Nursing were asked to agree jointly with Directors of Estates and Facilities what was needed and how it would be evaluated. |
| December 2007 | Operating framework for NHS, 2008/2009 [ | Recognized that meeting the HCAI challenge required additional actions across the NHS for 2008/2009, including: introducing MRSA screening for all elective admissions from 2008/2009, and for all emergency admissions as soon as practicable within the next 3 years; and implementing the forthcoming HCAI and Cleanliness Strategy. |
| July 2008 | MRSA screening operational guidance [ | Supported NHS trusts in introducing MRSA screening for all elective patients by March 2009. |
| September 2008 | Clean Hands Save Lives. NPSA updated and reissued their Patient Safety Alert [ | The alert recognized the reduction in MRSA bacteremias; however, it stated to maintain this and other improvements, it was vital that hand hygiene remains high on the patient safety agenda. |
| December 2008 | Operating framework for NHS, 2009/2010 [ | Noted that the NHS had achieved the ambitious 50% reduction of MRSA nationally, although not in every organization: this objective should remain their immediate goal. From April 2009, all elective admissions had to be screened for MRSA, and this was to be extended to emergency admissions as soon as possible and no later than 2011. |
| January 2009 | NHS Constitution published [ | Recognized that the NHS had met the national target to halve the number of MRSA bloodstream infections by 2008/2009 and that it was expected to continue to reduce HCAIs. Setting a national minimum standard for these infections would be considered. |
| December 2009 | Operating framework for NHS, 2010/2011 [ | After a recommendation from the National Quality Board, from April 2010, NHS organizations were to set an objective for reducing MRSA infections, relative to the median, with the best performers setting their objectives locally. The objective reflected a zero-tolerance approach to preventable infections and aimed to reduce variation in performance on MRSA bloodstream infections. The MRSA objectives for 2010–2011 were calculated against yearly baseline data from October 2008– September 2009. |
| March 2010 | MRSA screening operational guidance 3 [ | Supported NHS organizations in introducing MRSA screening for all relevant emergency admissions by end of 2010. |
| December 2010 | Operating framework for NHS, 2011/2012 [ | MRSA objectives for 2011–2012 were set using the same methodology as the previous year. |
| 2011 | National One Week Audit of MRSA screening in NHS acute trusts [ | Found that screening all admissions according to current guidance is not clinically or cost effective; recommended that all patients admitted to high-risk specialties and all critical care units, whether elective or emergency admissions, should be screened for MRSA. Patients identified as carrying MRSA should be isolated and given decolonization/suppressive therapy. |
| November 2011 | Start Smart Then Focus launched [ | Guidance to NHS acute Trusts on antimicrobial stewardship. |
Abbreviations: A&E, accident and emergency; BSI, blood stream infections; CMO, Chief Medical Officer; CVC, central venous catheter; HAI, hospital-acquired infection; HCAI, healthcare-associated infection; ICU, intensive care unit; MRSA, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; NHS, National Health Service; NPSA, National Patient Safety Agency; UC, urinary catheter; UK, United Kingdom.