BACKGROUND: The most common infection acquired in US hospitals is Clostridium difficile, which can lead to protracted diarrhea, severe abdominal cramping, and infectious colitis and an attributable mortality of 6.5%. The mortality associated with C. difficile is of major clinical importance. The best strategy to prevent such infections is an open question. METHODS: A multiyear quality improvement initiative was performed in our community hospital to determine where hospitals should focus their resources to achieve sustainable reductions in hospital-acquired C. difficile infection (CDI). Quality improvement methodology was used to evaluate the impact of sequential interventions in environmental cleaning, infection prevention, and antibiotic stewardship over time. RESULTS: After four years, hospital-acquired CDI declined 55.5%, from 12.2 to 5.4 cases/10,000 patient-days (Poisson rate test, p = 0.002). High-risk antibiotic use declined 88.1%, from 63.7 to 7.6 days on treatment/1,000 patient-days (Student's t-test, p < 0.001). The highest-impact intervention was stewardship on diagnostics and high-risk antibiotics using home-grown decision support tools. CONCLUSION: Translating scientific evidence into clinical practice using quality improvement methods led to sustained reductions in C. difficile transmission and identified high-risk antibiotics and diagnostics as key leverage points.
BACKGROUND: The most common infection acquired in US hospitals is Clostridium difficile, which can lead to protracted diarrhea, severe abdominal cramping, and infectious colitis and an attributable mortality of 6.5%. The mortality associated with C. difficile is of major clinical importance. The best strategy to prevent such infections is an open question. METHODS: A multiyear quality improvement initiative was performed in our community hospital to determine where hospitals should focus their resources to achieve sustainable reductions in hospital-acquired C. difficileinfection (CDI). Quality improvement methodology was used to evaluate the impact of sequential interventions in environmental cleaning, infection prevention, and antibiotic stewardship over time. RESULTS: After four years, hospital-acquired CDI declined 55.5%, from 12.2 to 5.4 cases/10,000 patient-days (Poisson rate test, p = 0.002). High-risk antibiotic use declined 88.1%, from 63.7 to 7.6 days on treatment/1,000 patient-days (Student's t-test, p < 0.001). The highest-impact intervention was stewardship on diagnostics and high-risk antibiotics using home-grown decision support tools. CONCLUSION: Translating scientific evidence into clinical practice using quality improvement methods led to sustained reductions in C. difficile transmission and identified high-risk antibiotics and diagnostics as key leverage points.
Authors: Himesh B Zaver; Varun P Moktan; Eugene P Harper; Aman Bali; Ayan Nasir; Carla Foulks; Justin Kuhlman; Max Green; Gillian A Algan; Heather C Parth; Melody Wu-Ballis; Sandra DiCicco; Brenda T Smith; Ronald N Owen; Lorraine S Mai; Sarah L Spiros; John Griffis; Daphne T Ramsey Walker; D Jane Hata; Justin M Oring; Harry R Powers; Wendelyn Bosch Journal: Mayo Clin Proc Innov Qual Outcomes Date: 2021-11-10