Evaluating application of the National Healthcare Safety Network central line-associated bloodstream infection surveillance definition: a survey of pediatric intensive care and hematology/oncology units
Autor: | Marlene R. Miller, Gloria C. Morrell, Cuilan Gao, Carol Rosenberg, W. Charles Huskins, Susan E. Coffin, Aditya H. Gaur |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Microbiology (medical)
medicine.medical_specialty Catheterization Central Venous Quality management Epidemiology MEDLINE Hospital Departments Intensive Care Units Pediatric Intensive care Bloodstream infection Oncology Service Hospital Health care Medicine Infection control Humans Intensive care medicine Child Central line business.industry Hematology United States Infectious Diseases Catheter-Related Infections Emergency medicine Practice Guidelines as Topic business Hematology+Oncology |
Zdroj: | Infection control and hospital epidemiology. 34(7) |
ISSN: | 1559-6834 0195-9417 |
Popis: | Objective.To evaluate the application of the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) central line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) definition in pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) and pediatric hematology/oncology units (PHOUs) participating in a multicenter quality improvement collaborative to reduce CLABSIs; to identify sources of variability in the application of the definition.Design.Online survey using 18 standardized case scenarios. Each described a positive blood culture in a patient and required a yes-or-no answer to the question “Is this a CLABSI?” NHSN staff responses were the reference standard.Setting.Sixty-five US PICUs and PHOUs.Participants.Staff who routinely adjudicate CLABSIs using NHSN definitions.Results.Sixty responses were received from 58 (89%) of 65 institutions; 78% of respondents were infection preventionists, infection control officers, or infectious disease physicians. Responses matched those of NHSN staff for 78% of questions. The mean (SE) percentage of concurring answers did not differ for scenarios evaluating application of 1 of the 3 criteria (“known pathogen,” 78% [1.7%]; “skin contaminant, >1 year of age,” 76% [SE, 2.5%]; “skin contaminant, ≤1 year of age,” 81% [3.8%]; P = .3 ). The mean percentage of concurring answers was lower for scenarios requiring respondents to determine whether a CLABSI was present or incubating on admission (64% [4.6%]; P = .017) or to distinguish between primary and secondary bacteremia (65% [2.5%]; P = .021).Conclusions.The accuracy of application of the CLABSI definition was suboptimal. Efforts to reduce variability in identifying CLABSIs that are present or incubating on admission and in distinguishing primary from secondary bloodstream infection are needed. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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