Exemplary Professional Practice CARE DELIVERY SYSTEM(S)

Similar documents
Eliminating Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections: Implementing a Quality Improvement Project

CAUTI Prevention Case Study

Nurse Driven Foley Removal Protocol. Cathy Moore, MSN, ACNS-BC, CCRN 2009

Changing ICU culture to reduce catheter-associated urinary tract infections

Device Utilization and CAUTI Prevention. Lori Fornwalt, RN, CIC Infection Prevention Coordinator October 4, 2016

CAUTI reduction at Mayo Clinic

Running head: EBN & CAUTIS 1

Driving CAUTI Rates to ZERO. Nada Nassar, BSN, MSN Nurse Quality Manager-AUBMC

What are the Barriers and Facilitators to Nurses Utilization of a Nurse Driven Protocol for Indwelling Urinary Catheter Removal?

IT TAKES A VILLAGE TO IMPLEMENT CATHETER ASSOCIATED URINARY TRACT INFECTION (CAUTI) PREVENTION

Goal Statement: Achieve reduction in CAUTI events by review and implementation of best practices for utilization and management.

Text-based Document. Downloaded 25-Apr :55:57.

Jennifer A. Meddings, MD, MSc

Kathleen S. Hall-Meyer, RN, MBA, CIC Saint Luke s Health System Kansas City, Missouri

Engaging Residents and Families in HAIs/CAUTI Prevention. Presenters

Evidence Based Practices to Prevent HAIs/CAUTI and Improve Resident Safety

Introduction to Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) Open Call Series #1 Surveillance

LEAN HEALTHCARE: Elimination of CAUTI on 8 East Providence St. Vincent Medical Center. Purdue Research Foundation

Right Sizing Healthcare-Associated Infection Prevention Measures for Critical Access Hospitals. Bonnie M. Barnard, MPH, CIC

CAUTI: Chasing Zero in Critical Care

MBQIP ABBREVIATIONS. Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Inhibitor. American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists

CSR Hospital Compass Newsletter

August 28, Dear Ms. Tavenner:

Clinical Intervention Overview: Objectives

Healthcare- associated Infections in North Carolina: A Statewide Discussion

Chasing Zero Infections Webinar: CAUTI Coaching Call March 21, 2017

Infection Prevention. Fundamentals of. March 21-23, 2017 Oregon Medical Association Portland, OR. oregonpatientsafety.org

Real Time CLABSI Case Reviews at HCMC. Mary Ellen Bennett Steph Laskowski

Indwelling Urinary Catheters: A One- Point Restraint?

Goal Elements of Performance APIC Comments APIC Recommendations

Indwelling Catheter Care: Areas for Improvement

Leveraging the Accountable Care Unit Model to create a culture of Shared Accountability

CMS and NHSN: What s New for Infection Preventionists in 2013

Effects of Electronic Alerts on Urinary Catheter Days

EP20EO Clinical nurses are involved in the review, action planning, and evaluation of patient safety data at the unit level.

Advanced Measurement for Improvement Prework

The Use of NHSN in HAI Surveillance and Prevention

2015 Executive Overview

Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. (APIC) Vision: Healthcare without infection

The Culture of Culturing: The Importance of Knowing When to Order Urine Cultures. Today s Presenters

APIC Election 2017 Results

HIMSS Nicholas E. Davies Award of Excellence Case Study Nebraska Medicine October 10, 2017

Antimicrobial Stewardship Program in the Nursing Home

Antibiotics - Are they OVERUSED? 4/6/2018. Antibiotic Stewardship Key Clinical Strategies for Successful Outcomes. Pathway Health 1.

HOSPITAL ACQUIRED COMPLICATIONS. Shruti Scott, DO, MPH Department of Medicine UCI Hospitalist Program

HIMSS 2013 Davies Enterprise Award Application Texas Health Resources. Core Case Study Clinical Value

HIMSS Submission Leveraging HIT, Improving Quality & Safety

Joint Commission NPSG 7: 2011 Update and 2012 Preview

New Jersey State Department of Health and Senior Services Healthcare-Associated Infections Plan 2010

INFECTION of the urinary tract caused

Dan Bronson-Lowe, PhD, CIC

Benefits of Reporting in NHSN. April 24, 2018

APIC Questions with Answers. NHSN FAQ Webinar. Wednesday, September 9, :00-3:00 PM EST

The Core Elements of Antibiotic Stewardship with CMS and QAPI Updates

From Defeating CAUTI to Preventing Urinary Catheter Harm

Implementing Antimicrobial Stewardship Programs- Suggestions for Rural and Critical Access Hospitals-a Hospital Story

Global Nursing Perspectives and Professionalism

Uniform Data System. The Functional Assessment Specialists. June 21, 2011

Preventing Hospital-Acquired Infections: A National Survey of Practices Reported by U.S. Hospitals in 2005 and 2009

Navigating through Frontline Competencies, Training and Audits

WHY IMPLEMENT CENTRAL LINE INSERTION BUNDLES

Strategies to Prevent Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections in Acute Care Hospitals: 2014 Update

The CAUTI Can-Can. Hennepin County Medical Center August Caitlin Eccles-Radtke, MD Infectious Disease and CAUTI Prevention Champion

Infection Prevention and Control: How to Meet the Conditions of Participation for Home Health

Learning Session 4: Required Infection Reporting for Minnesota CAH

Nurse staffing, burnout linked to hospital infections

Core Elements of Antibiotic Stewardship for Nursing Homes

The Nexus of Quality and Finance

Is It Really a UTI? Do You Know It When You See It?

Disclosures Nothing to disclose

Apic Infection Control Manual For Long Term Care Facilities

Why Shepherd? Shepherd Center Patients. Here s How We Measure Up: Shepherd Patient Population

Performance Scorecard 2013

NHSN Updates. Linda R Greene RN, MPS, CIC

June 24, Dear Ms. Tavenner:

IHA District Meetings February-March, : Iowa Environmental Assessment in Quality and Patient Safety HEN, QIN, TCPI, SIM

August 15, Dear Mr. Slavitt:

Our Journey Towards CAUTI Freedom. Johnson City Medical Center

CMS and NHSN: What s New for Infection Preventionists in 2013 Part II

2014 Partnership in Prevention Award. November 21, :00-1:00PM EST. Introduction

Quality Based Impacts to Medicare Inpatient Payments

Can Empowered Nurses Decrease Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI) Rates?

How Data-Driven Safety Culture Changes Can Lower HAC Rates

Bridging the Gap Between Research and Practice in Long- Term Care An Innovative Model for Success

Catheterisation and competency. Allison Robertson CNS Urology

In 2008, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Example 1: Non-Nutritive Suck and Cue-Based Feedings Instead of Scheduled Feedings in the Newborn Intensive Care Unit

Harm Across the Board Reporting: How your Hospital Can Get There

WAHU Quality Presentation 4/6/2017

1.2 billion ambulatory care visits in US: physician offices, outpatient hospital and ED

Surgical Site Infection Prevention: Guidelines, Recommendations and Best Practice

Training /CoP Call. Disparities National Coordinating Center. Part 1: Training on Leadership Allen Herman, DNCC Becky Roberson, IHQ

Patient Experience of Care Survey Results Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (Inpatient)

Thank you for spending your valuable time with us today. This webinar will be recorded for your convenience.

5/9/17. Healthcare-Associated Infections Cultural Shift. Background. Disclosures and Disclaimers

Text-based Document. Empirical Outcomes: An Autograph for Our Nursing Care. Petto, Pamela; Pruitt, Tangee; Roberts-Turner, Renee

Quality Measure Indicators +Throughput Metrics + Automated Dashboard = Innovation to Improve Quality Goals

Exemplary Professional Practice: Patient Care Delivery Model(s)

NMSA Hospital-Acquired Infection

NHSN: An Update on the Risk Adjustment of HAI Data

Transcription:

Exemplary Professional Practice CARE DELIVERY SYSTEM(S) EP7EO s systematically evaluate professional organizations standards of practice, incorporating them into the organization s professional practice model and care delivery system. Provide one example, with supporting evidence, of an improvement resulting from a change in clinical practice due to the application of professional organizations standards of nursing practice. The example provided may be at the unit, division, or organizational level. Supporting evidence must be submitted in the form of a graph with a data table that clearly displays the data. Background/ Problem The reduction of Healthcare Acquired Infections (HAI) is a major initiative of hospitals nationally. The importance of this effort has been underscored by the requirement to report HAIs externally to the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs) represent the most common of these HAIs. The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) reports that 70-80% of hospital acquired UTIs are associated with the use of an indwelling urinary catheter. SHEA also estimates that 12-16% of hospitalized adult patients have a catheter during their stay (Lo et al., 2014). Therefore, the reduction of catheter use becomes a primary goal in any Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI) outcome improvement project. The Center for Disease Control (CDC), Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA), the American Hospital Association (AHA), Association for Professionals in Infections and Epidemiology (APIC), The Joint Commission, and SHEA collaborated in 2008 to determine best practices, and published the Compendium of Strategies to Prevent Healthcare Associated Infections in Acute Care Hospitals. A Compendium Update was published in 2014. Laurel Mode, BSN,, Infection Preventionist/ Specialist and Pam Bierbaum, BSN,, CIC, Infection Prevention Coordinator, are both active members of APIC and strive to ensure ABMC nursing practices comply with current infection control standards. Having a strong professional relationship with the Advocate BroMenn Medical Center (ABMC) CAUTI team, Laurel and Pam partnered with the team. The HAI prevention strategies in the section titled Strategies to Prevent Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections in Acute Care Hospitals were reviewed and compared to ABMC practice. The ABMC CAUTI team had been evaluating surveillance data and implementing practice changes since 2009. Practice changes initiated from 2009 through 2014 included a nurse driven urinary catheter removal protocol (2009), a practice survey and assessment followed by associate education (2012), product evaluations and revisions in associate orientation and education (2013), and establishment of catheter insertion criteria based on the Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee EP7EO Advocate BroMenn Medical Center 1

(HICPAC)/ CDC Guideline (2014). These efforts succeeded in reducing the ABMC CAUTI rate from 7.45/1000 device days in second quarter 2009 to.70/1000 device days in second quarter 2014. Despite this significant progress, a spike in the ABMC CAUTI rate to 2.01/1000 device days in fourth quarter 2014 prompted the CAUTI team to review the newer best practice guidelines, including the SHEA/IDSA 2014 Compendium Update. Through a review of professional standards, the CAUTI team identified opportunities to enhance clinical excellence related to appropriate catheter use and prompt catheter removal. When developing an action plan, the ABMC CAUTI team also reviewed On the CUSP: Stop CAUTI Implementation Guide (Health Research & Educational Trust, 2013), a detailed manual developed by the Health Research & Education Trust for the Agency for Healthcare Research and (AHRQ) and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). This guide was designed to assist teams in the implementation of a CAUTI reduction program. The CAUTI team determined that the greatest opportunity for reduction of CAUTIs existed on the Progressive Care Unit (PCU). PCU had one CAUTI in May 2015 and one CAUTI July 2015. The PCU monthly CAUTI rate varied from 0 to 12.99 from May to July 2015. Goal Statement To consistently reduce the monthly CAUTI rate on PCU. The outcome measure utilized was the monthly CAUTI rate (number of CAUTIs/1000 device days). Description of the Intervention/Initiative/Activities The On The CUSP: STOP CAUTI Implementation Guide (Health Research & Educational Trust, 2013) identified three intervention steps to prevent CAUTIs: Appropriate catheter use Proper catheter insertion and maintenance Prompt catheter removal PCU s greatest opportunities were related to appropriate catheter use and prompt catheter removal. Appropriate Catheter Use Intervention PCU identified that patients were received from other departments with catheters that did not meet the criteria for insertion. Investigating the issue revealed that ABMC s electronic medical record did not include insertion criteria documentation for the Emergency Department, Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory or Operating Room. To align with the Professional Practice Model and The Advocate value of clinical excellence and to correct this issue, catheter insertion criteria was added to the EP7EO Advocate BroMenn Medical Center 2

electronic medical record documentation in August 2015 for these three procedural areas and associate training was provided immediately prior to implementation. Prompt Foley Removal Interventions: Although acute urinary retention is an appropriate indication for catheter use, validation of urinary retention prior to catheter insertion is important. Bladder scanning (portable bladder ultrasound) is a simple, non-invasive tool for ensuring that the patient has sufficient urinary retention to justify catheterization. Assessment of current practice demonstrated that bladder scanning was not consistently employed on PCU. The 2015 annual Skills Days held in August and attended by all PCU nurses, included a professional development CAUTI education module which reviewed: Bladder scanning indication and training on use Indications for one-time or intermittent straight catheterization Indwelling catheter removal trial to assess patient bladder functioning related to retention Updated indwelling catheter continuation criteria To support the use of bladder scanning, additional bladder scanners were purchased for medical center units that did not have one. Although PCU had a bladder scanner, other units frequently borrowed it so the additional bladder scanners made the one on PCU more readily available for nurses to consistently use. Reporting of Catheter Usage in Daily Leadership and Unit Safety Huddles: ABMC leaders meet every morning for a Daily Safety Huddle to identify actual and potential issues that may affect the safety or quality of patient care delivered that day. The leaders then proactively address potential issues. In August 2015, the need to increase awareness of overall catheter usage, CAUTIs, and individual accountability was considered critical to reducing the incidence of CAUTIs. A practice was implemented requiring all inpatient units (including PCU) to report the number of indwelling catheters on the unit and the number of indwelling catheters that have been in place longer than 48 hours, including the clinical rationale for use, at the Daily Safety Huddles. Procedure areas report the number of indwelling catheters inserted in the previous 24 hours. To further support this initiative, the days since the last CAUTI was added to the daily huddle reporting. PCU conducts a unit safety huddle each shift. To promote clinical excellence and as part of the care delivery process, indwelling catheter usage and a discussion of the rationale for continued catheter use were added to the PCU huddle. The result was an increased awareness of the safety risk of indwelling catheters by all levels of nursing from the clinical nurse to nurse leader. The unit huddle has the same goals as the ABMC Leader Daily Safety Huddle but with the focus being on the specific unit s patients. EP7EO Advocate BroMenn Medical Center 3

Participants Name & Credentials Discipline Title Department Medical Oncology Theresa Bailey, MSN, Specialty Unit/ Manager Pediatrics/ Outpatient Infusion Lindsey (Loni) Benedict, Clinician II-Weekender 6West Surgical Unit Pam Bierbaum, BSN,, CIC Coordinator, Infection Prevention Lori Harper, MBA, MSN,, NE-BC Mary Ann Kirchner, MSN, Michael Mandrell, BS, BSN,, CC, CEN, CPEN, CPN Laurel Mode, BSN, Director, Practice and Mother Baby Unit Documentation Improvement Specialist- Educator Infection Preventionist/ Specialist Administration Emergency Department Kristin Peterson, MSN, Johanna Samara, BSN, Shelly Yoder, BSN, Manager/ Stroke Coordinator Manager Manager Progressive Care Unit Informatics Cardiovascular Care Unit/ Intensive Care Unit/ Central Telemetry EP7EO Advocate BroMenn Medical Center 4

Outcomes Pre-intervention Intervention The implementation of the three interventions into the delivery of patient care on PCU produced the desired outcome. The result was zero CAUTIs in PCU from September 2015 through March 2016. Reporting catheter usage at the ABMC Leadership Safety Huddle helped the leaders maintain a focus on CAUTI reduction. The daily PCU safety huddle discussions increased individual nurse accountability, leadership, patient centered care, and clinical excellence to ensure indwelling catheter appropriateness and timely discontinuation References Health Research & Educational Trust (2013). On the CUSP: Stop CAUTI Implementation Guide: 2013. Lo, E., Nicolle, L.E., Cofin, S.E., Gould, C., Maragakis, L.L., Meddings, J., Yokoe, D.S. (2014). Strategies to Prevent Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infections in Acute Care Hospitals: 2014 Update. Infection Control, 35, 464-479, doi:10.1086/765718 8.2.16 jlm EP7EO Advocate BroMenn Medical Center 5