Improve Critical Care
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The ‘How to Guide’ for
Improving
Critical Care
Main contacts for Improving Critical Care
Campaign Director leading on the content area: Alan Willson
Faculty member for this content area: Mark Smithies, Dave Hope
Content Specialist: Chris Hancock
IA/Senior IA: Mike Davidge
Other (as determined by Director)
Improving Critical Care
Contents
Improving Critical Care Getting Started List 4
Improving Critical Care 5
Drivers, Interventions and Measures 6
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm from mechanical ventilation 6
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to complications of using central venous catheters 9
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to severe sepsis 12
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to transmission of infection in critical care 15
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm by the creation in critical care of an environment of collaboration and a culture of safety 17
Making it Happen 18
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm from mechanical ventilation 18
Defining the Problem 18
The Ventilator Bundle 19
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to complications of using central venous catheters 21
The Central Line Bundle 22
Preventing Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infections – Components of Care 23
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to severe sepsis 25
Surviving Sepsis Campaign 25
27
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to transmission of infection in critical care 28
What changes can we make that will result in improvement? 29
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm by the creation in critical care of an environment of collaboration and a culture of safety 31
Leadership and Organisational Culture 31
Getting Started 32
Using the Model for Improvement 32
Forming the Team 33
Setting Aims 34
First Test of Change 34
Barriers That May Be Encountered 34
Measurement 35
Track Measures over Time 37
Tips for Gathering Data 37
Critical Success Factors 38
Programme managers 38
Local Champions 38
Patient involvement 38
Ownership of change 38
Links 39
Improving Critical Care Getting Started List
Prior to testing and implementation of improving critical care, organisations may wish to consider the following:
• Engage senior leadership support
• Appoint a multi-disciplinary implementation team to: -
o Steer and co-ordinate the interventions
o Review process and outcome data
• Appoint individual or team as ‘process owner’.
This ‘local content specialist’ will have well developed links with both critical and acute care and will co-ordinate implementation of the interventions.
• Appoint clinical champions
• Provide education and training
• Establish quantitative and qualitative feedback mechanisms
• Measure effectiveness
Improving Critical Care
The aim of the Improving Critical Care work area within the 1000 Lives Campaign is to build upon the achievements of the Welsh Critical Care Improvement Programme (WCCIP) and spread service improvement work to operational areas that also treat critically ill patients beyond the intensive care unit
During the years 2006 - 2008 the WCCIP has enabled the introduction of care bundles and change methodologies in Welsh adult critical care units. In collaboration with the Welsh Critical Care Advisory Group, Critical Care Networks and other stakeholders, the 1000 Lives Campaign will aim to further reduce the incidence of adverse events in critical care.
As part of the 1000 Lives Campaign, participating NHS Trusts will improve care of the critically Ill by improving communication, handwashing and patient involvement in the ICU and implementing the ventilator, central line and sepsis bundles in the wider hospital environs.
This booklet is adapted from the Safer Patient Initiative ‘how to kits’ and intended as a toolkit for the Trust Critical Care Team to use to introduce the various interventions within this work area. The interventions and measures are outlined and change methodology tools are introduced.
Drivers, Interventions and Measures
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm from mechanical ventilation
Intervention level: All level 3 and 3T critical care units
Reliable Processes:
Welsh ventilator care bundle elements:
• Elevation of head of the bed to between 30 and 45 degrees
• Daily “sedation vacation” and daily assessment of readiness to wean
• Peptic Ulcer (PU) Prophylaxis
• Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT) Prophylaxis
Implement non-physician driven weaning protocol
Formal swallow evaluations for long term ventilated patients
Endotracheal tube cuff inflation via minimal pressure technique
Use protocols and auto-stop points for antibiotics
Measures
|Measure |Operational Definition |Data Collection Guidance |Data Collection Source |
|VAP Rate |Determine the numerator: The total |Report monthly infection rate for |VAP surveillance in Wales is due to |
|Code: CC01 |number of ventilator acquired |the months of April 08 through March|be piloted from January / February |
| |pneumonia cases in the month Use |09. This serves as your baseline. |2008, with a view to the |
| |definition agreed between the WCCIP |Continue to report monthly data over|surveillance scheme being added to |
| |and the WHAI Programme. |the life of the initiative into the |the mandatory CVC infection |
| |Determine the denominator: the total|Extranet. Provide numerators and |surveillance on ICU from September |
| |ventilator days in the month |denominators when entering the data.|2008. Data on all ventilated |
| |The VAP rate is calculated by |The annotation section should be |patients will be collected plus |
| |dividing the total number of VAPs |used to reflect any interventions |information on any VAP infections |
| |occurring in the month by the total |that were made to reduce the VAP |identified according to HELICS |
| |number of ventilator days in the |rate. |definitions. The data will be |
| |month and then multiplying the | |presented as a VAP rate per 1000 |
| |result by 1000 to create a VAP rate |There should be no sampling for this|ventilator days and will be reported|
| |for 1000 ventilator days |measure. |back to units on a monthly basis |
| | | |similar to the Central line |
| | | |infection surveillance see below. |
|Percent compliance |Determine the numerator: the number |Ventilator compliance is measured by|This figure is at present collected |
|with ventilator |of vented patients in the sample |selecting all patients in the |on the WCCIP database and reports |
|bundle |receiving all 4 components of the |unit(s) on a randomly selected day |are generated as required. |
|Code: CCP2 |ventilator bundle. |each week and determining ventilator| |
| |Determine the denominator: the total|bundle compliance. Use daily goal | |
| |number of patients reviewed |sheet or consultant order sheet as | |
| |Calculate the percent compliance |the primary data source or direct | |
| |with the ventilator bundle by |observation. Review each sheet for | |
| |dividing the numerator by the |implementation of the vent bundle. | |
| |denominator and multiplying the |This is a sample Yes/No outcome. If | |
| |result by 100 |the patient did not have ALL 4 | |
| |Note: The ventilator bundle |components then they are considered | |
| |components include: HOB, PUD |not in compliance with the | |
| |prophylaxis, DVT prophylaxis, daily |ventilator bundle. | |
| |sedation vacation. | | |
| | |Sample should include all vented | |
| | |patients. Only patients with all 4 | |
| | |aspects of vent bundle in place are | |
| | |recorded as compliant. | |
| | | | |
| | |Conduct sample one day each week, | |
| | |this is a weekly prevalence measure.| |
| | |Rotate days of the week and shifts. | |
| | |All vented patients on the day of | |
| | |the sample are examined for evidence| |
| | |of bundle compliance. Report the 4 | |
| | |prevalence data points (the 4 days | |
| | |selected) for the month as an | |
| | |aggregated numerator and denominator| |
| | |each month on the Extranet. | |
|ALOS on mechanical |Determine the numerator: the total |This measure should not be based on |A monthly report on this measure is |
|ventilation |number of ICU mechanical ventilator |a sample. Instead it should include |generated from the Welsh Critical |
|Code: CCP1 |days during the month. |all the vent days and patients in |Care Minimum Dataset (CCMDS). |
| |Determine the denominator: The total|the ICU(s) being studied. | |
| |number of ICU patients on a | | |
| |mechanical ventilator during the | | |
| |month. | | |
| |Calculate the ALOS on mechanical | | |
| |ventilator by dividing the numerator| | |
| |(total number of vent days) by the | | |
| |denominator (total vent patients) | | |
|ICU ALOS (balancing|Determine the numerator: ICU monthly|Collect and report this measure |A monthly report on this measure is |
|measure) |patient days |monthly for patients admitted to |generated from the Welsh Critical |
|Code: CCB1 |Determine the denominator: total |ICU. |Care Minimum Dataset (CCMDS). |
| |number of patients discharged from | | |
| |the ICU in the month. | | |
| |Calculate the ICU ALOS. All patients| | |
| |discharged in a given month should | | |
| |have their length of stays summed up| | |
| |and divided by the number of | | |
| |patients. This is the average for | | |
| |the month. | | |
|Monthly rate of |A patient who is identified as fit | |Check against the definition in the |
|delayed transfers |for discharge when the time between | |CCMDS of “fit for discharge” and the|
|of care |requesting a Ward bed and discharge | |time the discharge was initiated but|
| |from the Critical Care unit exceeds | |it was considered that the “clock |
| |4 hours | |starts” around the time the ward |
| | | |level bed was requested. |
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to complications of using central venous catheters
Intervention level: All level 1, 2, 3 and 3T units in which CVCs are used
Reliable Processes:
Elements of the Welsh Central Line Insertion Bundle
• Wash hands before and after procedure: soap and water or alcohol-based agents.
• Use barrier precautions: gown and gloves must be worn; as much as possible of the patient should be covered with sterile drapes.
• Sterilise skin with 2% chlorhexidine in alcohol and wait until the skin is dry.
• Avoid the femoral site unless it is the last resort.
Elements of the Welsh Central Line Maintenance Bundle
• Review necessity of central line every day - and remove promptly if it is not needed.
• TPN should be given via a separate line or a dedicated lumen.
• Access to line must be made using a clean technique.
• Entry site to be checked every day for signs of leakage or inflammation and line removed promptly if these signs are present.
Implement preparation and dressing protocols for management of lines
Use line trolleys and dressing change kits
Measures
|Measure |Operational |Data Collection |Data Collection |
| |Definition |Guidance |Source |
|Central line |Determine the numerator: The total |Report the numerator and denominator |In Wales CVC infections on ICU |
|catheter-Related |number of central line |monthly to the Extranet. Provide |are collected within a mandatory|
|bloodstream |catheter-related infections for the |annotations as appropriate to reflect |surveillance scheme (Mandatory |
|infection rate |month |any interventions you made during the |since September 2007). Data is |
|Code: CC02 |Determine the denominator: the total |month. |submitted to the WHAIP team |
| |number of central line days for the | |centrally and reported back on a|
| |month | |monthly basis in the form of |
| |The CLC BSI rate is calculated by | |central line infections per 1000|
| |dividing the total numerator by the | |catheter days. |
| |denominator and multiplying the result| | |
| |by 1000 to get the CLC BSI rate per | | |
| |1000 catheter days | | |
|Days between a CLC |This measure is a cumulative count of |Whenever events occur that are |Days between infections can be |
|bloodstream |the number of days that have gone by |relatively rare in nature or when a |calculated locally, but may |
|infections |with no CLC bloodstream infections |ward or pilot area has sufficiently |become part of the report sent |
|Code: CC03 |being reported. Every time a CLC |small numbers of events, the preferred|out by the WHAIP team in due |
| |infection occurs the count is started |way to go about analysing the data is |course |
| |over again. In this case, we are |to plot: (1) successes between |. |
| |plotting successes between failures. |failures, or (2) time between | |
| |The longer the run of cumulative |failures. Both of these techniques | |
| |successes (days with no CLC BSIs |have being used in the SPI work. | |
| |occurring) the better o | | |
| |utcome. |For events, 150 days or more between | |
| | |CL infections is the target. If an | |
| | |intervention is initiated, however, | |
| | |and the period between events is | |
| | |greater than two times the baseline | |
| | |period average this is also | |
| | |significant. In this case, it may be | |
| | |possible to show a true improvement | |
| | |before going 150 days without a CLC | |
| | |BSI. | |
|Percentage |Determine the numerator: the total | |A report on this |
|compliance with CVC|number of patients who have all 4 | |measure is currently |
|insertion |elements of the bundle in place | |generated by the |
|bundle |Determine the denominator: the total | |WCCIP database. |
| |number of inserted lines. | | |
| |Calculate the percent compliance with | | |
| |the central line bundle by dividing | | |
| |the numerator by the denominator and | | |
| |then multiplying the resulting | | |
| |proportion by 100 | | |
|Percentage |1. Determine the numerator: the total |Use daily goal sheet or consultant |A report on this |
|compliance with |number of patients who have all 4 |order sheet as the primary data |measure is currently |
|central line bundle|elements of the bundle in place |source. Review each sheet for |generated by the |
|Code: CCP3 |2. Determine the denominator: the |implementation of the CL bundle. |WCCIP database. |
| |total number of patients reviewed | | |
| |3.Calculate the percent compliance |Rotate the days of the week and shifts| |
| |with the central line bundle by |within a day. On the randomly selected| |
| |dividing the numerator by the |days, all patients with CLs should be | |
| |denominator and then multiplying the |examined for evidence of CL bundle | |
| |resulting proportion by 100 |compliance. There is no sampling with | |
| | |this measure; include all patients | |
| | |with CLs, you could select a random | |
| | |sample of 5 patients with CLs on the | |
| | |day you select for the study. | |
| | | | |
| | |Only patients with all 4 aspects of CL| |
| | |bundle in place are recorded as being | |
| | |in compliance. | |
| | | | |
| | |Report monthly to the | |
| | |Extranet but report each | |
| | |week’s prevalence. This | |
| | |means that there should | |
| | |be 4 data points for each | |
| | |month unless the volume | |
| | |is low (e.g. some weeks | |
| | |there are no CLs in place) | |
| | |in which case the results | |
| | |for all CLs for the month | |
| | |will need to be aggregated. | |
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to severe sepsis
Intervention level: All level 0,1,2,3 and 3T units
Reliable processes:
Elements of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign Management Bundle
• Low-dose steroids administered for septic shock in accordance with a standard ICU policy
• Drotrecogin alfa (activated) administered in accordance with a standard ICU policy.
• Glucose control maintained > 3.5 mmol/L but < 8.3 mmol/L
• For mechanically ventilated patients inspiratory plateau pressures maintained < 30 cm H2O.
Elements of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign Resuscitation Bundle
• Serum lactate measured
• Blood cultures obtained prior to antibiotic administration
• From the time of presentation, broad-spectrum antibiotics to be given within 3 hours for ED admissions and 1 hour for non-ED ICU admissions
• In the event of hypotension and/or lactate >4mmol/L (36mg/dL):
• Deliver an initial minimum of 20 ml/kg of crystalloid (or colloid equivalent)
• Give vasopressors for hypotension not responding to initial fluid resuscitation to maintain mean arterial pressure (MAP) > 65 mm Hg.
• In the event of persistent arterial hypotension despite volume resuscitation (septic shock) and/or initial lactate >4 mmol/L (36 mg/dl):
Achieve central venous pressure (CVP) of >8 mm Hg
Achieve central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO2) >70%
Elements of the Sepsis Six
• Give 100% oxygen via non-rebreathe bag
• Take blood cultures
• Give IV antibiotics
• Start IV fluid resuscitation with Hartmann’s or equivalent
• Check haemoglobin and lactate
• Place and monitor urinary catheter unless fully mobile (monitor UO)
Measures
|Measure |Operational Definition |Data Collection Guidance |Data Collection Source |
|Percentage |1. Determine the numerator: the | |A report on this |
|compliance with |number of patients fully compliant | |measure is currently |
|sepsis management |within 24 hours with the sepsis | |generated by the |
|bundle |management bundle in one month. | |WCCIP database. |
| |2. Determine the denominator: all | | |
| |severely septic patients treated on | | |
| |ICU in that month. | | |
| |3.Calculate the bundle compliance as| | |
| |a percentage by dividing the | | |
| |numerator by the denominator and | | |
| |multiplying by 100 | | |
|Percentage |1. Determine the numerator: the | |A report on this |
|compliance with |number of patients fully compliant | |measure is currently |
|sepsis |within 6 hours with the sepsis | |generated by the |
|resuscitation |resuscitation bundle in one month. | |WCCIP database. |
|bundle |2. Determine the denominator: all | | |
| |patients identified as having severe| | |
| |sepsis requiring a response in one | | |
| |month. | | |
| |3.Calculate the care bundle | | |
| |compliance as a percentage by | | |
| |dividing the numerator by the | | |
| |denominator and multiplying the | | |
| |result by 100 | | |
|Percentage |1. Determine the numerator: the | |A report on this |
|compliance with |number of patients fully compliant | |measure is currently |
|‘sepsis six’ |within 1 hour with the ‘sepsis six’ | |generated by the |
| |in one month. | |WCCIP database. |
| |2. Determine the denominator: all | | |
| |patients identified as having sepsis| | |
| |requiring a response in one month. | | |
| |3.Calculate the care bundle | | |
| |compliance as a percentage by | | |
| |dividing the numerator by the | | |
| |denominator and multiplying the | | |
| |result by 100 | | |
|Severe sepsis |1. Determine the denominator: all | | |
|mortality |patients triggered as having severe | | |
| |sepsis requiring a response in one | | |
| |month. | | |
| |1Determine the numerator: the number| | |
| |of patients within above set where | | |
| |hospital discharge = dead. | | |
| |3.Calculate the mortality as a | | |
| |percentage by dividing the numerator| | |
| |by the denominator and multiplying | | |
| |the result by 100 | | |
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to transmission of infection in critical care
Intervention level: All level 2, 3 and 3T units
Reliable Processes:
Use aggressive Hand-washing program to prevent risk of transmitting infection:
• Apply epic2 guidance for hospital practice
• Staff knowledge and competency
• Use waterless soap
• Install dispensers in all key locations
• Do periodic observational monitoring
• Staff accountability
• Involvement in the NPSA Clean your hands campaign
• Provide adequate hand washing facilities e.g. sinks must be convenient for patient/patient and caregiver in consideration of architectural standards that govern where sinks should be.
• Use of soap and water hand decontamination when there is an outbreak of diarrhoea on the unit or when caring for a patient who has diarrhoea.
• Regular audit of practice and feedback of results
Measures
|Measure |Operational Definition |Data Collection Guidance |Data Collection Source |
|Percent |Determine the numerator: the total |The sample of patients for this |There is no national data collection|
|compliance with |number of patient encounters in the |measure will come from a weekly |on hand hygiene compliance in Wales |
|hand hygiene |sample where appropriate hand |observation of patient care |although various audit tools have |
|Code: CCP4 & GWP2|hygiene was conducted. |encounters. Each week the designated|been made available at a national |
| |Determine the denominator: the |observer(s) should spend 20-30 |level: |
| |total number of patients in the |minutes observing as many patient |For regular and frequent observation|
| |sample |encounters as possible. The observer|of hand hygiene technique the NPSA |
| |Calculate the percent compliance |task can be rotated among staff in |clean your hands campaign audit tool|
| |with hand hygiene by dividing the |order to reduce the likelihood that |or the Lewisham tool are examples of|
| |numerator by the denominator and |individuals may increase compliance |appropriate tools. The Infection |
| |then multiplying the resulting |because they knew that a designated |Prevention Society (IPS formerly the|
| |proportion by 100 |individual was conducting the |ICNA) audit tool should also be used|
| | |observations. |regularly, but its focus is on the |
| |In this case “appropriate” hand | |availability of hand washing |
| |hygiene is defined as the observer |The sample should produce a total of|facilities rather than on |
| |witnessing that the healthcare |15-20 opportunities (the |observation of hand hygiene episodes|
| |provider (e,g, consultant, nurse, |denominator) for hand hygiene per |and should be used in conjunction |
| |and technician) properly cleaned |(week) or about 60 to 80 per month. |with the observational tools perhaps|
| |their hand (soap and water or |The sampling approach is to select a|to understand why in some cases |
| |alcohol gel) before contacting the |random day each week to conduct the |staff are not employing appropriate |
| |patient and after contact with the |observation of clinicians and other |hand hygiene. |
| |patient was made. |employees who actually touch a | |
| | |patient. This can be done ahead of | |
| |A single contact has two |time in order to set up observers on| |
| |opportunities to fail. This is a |the designated days. | |
| |simple Yes/No. were BOTH hand | | |
| |hygiene activities observed (before |If after a few tests you find that | |
| |and after patient contact)? If only |you are not getting 15-20 | |
| |one cleansing (either before |observations per day, you will need | |
| |contacting the patient or after |to select two days per week. | |
| |contacting the patient)was observed |Typically, however, one day a week | |
| |then hand hygiene was not |should give you the required sample | |
| |appropriate and a “No” would be |size. | |
| |recorded by the observer for this | | |
| |particular patient encounter. | | |
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm by the creation in critical care of an environment of collaboration and a culture of safety
Intervention level: All level 2, 3 and 3T critical care units
Reliable Processes
• Multi disciplinary rounds and daily goal setting
• Ensure staff have knowledge and expertise in improvement work
• Ensure communication and collaboration within a multi disciplinary team
• Appropriate infrastructure: intensivist led model
• Inclusion of patient/ public representation on local critical care improvement team
• Integrate patient/family into improvement work
Measures
|Measure |Operational Definition |Data Collection Guidance |Data Collection Source |
|Percent achievement|Determine the numerator: the total |One day per week (the same day as the | |
|of |number of patients with MDRs who also |MDRs study), conduct an audit for DGs.| |
|multi-disciplinary |had DGs documented |Look for documented evidence of DGs. | |
|rounds and daily |Determine the denominator: the total |Rotate data collection days of the | |
|goals |number of patients who had MDRs |week and shifts in order to avoid | |
|Code: CCP6 |Calculate the percent achievement of |“data collection” fatigue and the | |
| |daily goals by dividing the numerator |possibility of having staff change | |
| |by the denominator and multiplying the|their behaviours because they know the| |
| |result by 100 |day of the week that will be used to | |
| | |observe this measure. | |
| | |Remember that the denominator for this| |
| | |for this measure is the number of | |
| | |patients who had MRDs. | |
| | |Enter data into the Campaign Extranet | |
| | |with appropriate annotations to | |
| | |document issues related to data | |
| | |collection (e.g., how you randomly | |
| | |select the day of the week for the | |
| | |study). | |
Making it Happen
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm from mechanical ventilation
Intervention level: All level 3 and 3T critical care units
Defining the Problem
Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is a nosocomial lung infection that occurs in patients receiving mechanical ventilation and for whom the infection was not the reason for ventilation, i.e., the infection commenced after ventilation. Pneumonia is considered as ventilator associated if the patient was intubated and ventilated at the time or within 48 hours before the onset of infection.
Preventing pneumonia of any kind is certainly a laudable goal. However, based upon US data, there are some reasons to be particularly concerned about the impact of pneumonia associated with ventilator use: -
• VAP is the leading cause of death among hospital-acquired infections, exceeding the rate of death due to central line infections, severe sepsis, and respiratory tract infections in the non-intubated patient. Perhaps the most concerning aspect of VAP is the high rate of associated mortality. Hospital mortality of ventilated patients who develop VAP is 46%, compared to 32% for ventilated patients who do not develop VAP.
Ibrahim EH, Tracy L, Hill C, et al. The occurrence of ventilator-associated pneumonia in a community hospital: risk factors and clinical outcomes. Chest. 2001;20(2):555-561.
• In addition, VAP prolongs time spent on the ventilator, length of ICU stay, and length of hospital stay after discharge from the ICU.
Rello J, Ollendorf DA, Oster G, et al. VAP Outcomes Scientific Advisory Group. Epidemiology and outcomes of ventilator-associated pneumonia in a large US database. Chest. 2002;22(6):2115-2121.
• Strikingly, VAP adds an estimated cost of $40,000 to a typical hospital admission.
Tablan OC, Anderson LJ, Besser R, et al. CDC; Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee. Guidelines for preventing health-care-associated pneumonia, 2003: recommendations of CDC and the Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2004;53(RR-3):1-36.
The Ventilator Bundle
Care bundles, in general, are groupings of best practices with respect to a disease process that individually improve care, but when applied together may result in substantially greater improvement. Ventilator patients are at high risk for several serious complications: VAP, venous thromboembolism (VTE), and stress-induced gastrointestinal bleeding. The core elements of the bundle are evidence-based strategies that may prevent or reduce risk of these complications and the bundle is an effort to design a standard approach to delivering these core elements of care.
Compliance with the ventilator bundle can be measured by simple assessment of the completion of each item. The approach has been most successful when all elements are executed together, an “all-or-none” strategy.
The ventilator bundle that was agreed by participants on WCCIP has four key components:
1. Elevation of the Head of the Bed
Elevation of the head of the bed is an integral part of the ventilator bundle and has been correlated with reduction in the rate of ventilator-associated pneumonia. The recommended elevation is 30-45 degrees.
Drakulovic MB, Torres A, Bauer TT, Nicolas JM, Nogue S, Ferrer M. Supine body position as a risk factor for nosocomial pneumonia in mechanically ventilated patients: a randomised trial. Lancet. Nov 27 1999;354(9193):1851-1858.
van Nieuwenhoven CA, Vandenbroucke-Grauls C, van Tiel FH, et al. Feasibility and effects of the semirecumbent position to prevent ventilator-associated pneumonia: a randomized study. Crit Care Med. 2006 Feb;34(2):396-402.
2. Daily Sedative Interruption and Daily Assessment of Readiness to Extubate
Using daily sedative interruptions and assessing the patient’s readiness to extubate are an integral part of the ventilator bundle and have been correlated with reduction in the rate of ventilator-associated pneumonia.
Kress JP, Pohlman AS, O'Connor MF, Hall JB. Daily interruption of sedative infusions in critically ill patients undergoing mechanical ventilation. N Engl J Med. 2000;342(20):1471-1477.
Schweickert WD, Gehlbach BK, Pohlman AS, Hall JB, Kress JP. Daily interruption of sedative infusions and complications of critical illness in mechanically ventilated patients. Crit Care Med. 2004 Jun;32(6):1272-1276.
Kress JP, Gehlbach B, Lacy M, Pliskin N, Pohlman AS, Hall JB. The long-term psychological effects of daily sedative interruption on critically ill patients. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2003 Dec 15;168(12):1457-1461. Epub 2003 Oct 2.
Esteban, A. A comparison of four methods of weaning patients from mechanical ventilation. N Eng J Med. 1995;332:345-350.
3. Peptic Ulcer Disease (PUD) Prophylaxis
Stress ulcerations are the most common cause of gastrointestinal bleeding in intensive care unit patients, and the presence of gastrointestinal bleeding due to these lesions is associated with a five-fold increase in mortality compared to ICU patients without bleeding. Applying peptic ulcer disease prophylaxis is therefore a necessary intervention in critically ill patients.
Cook DJ, Fuller HD, Guyatt GH, et al. Risk factors for gastrointestinal bleeding in critically ill patients. N Engl J Med. 1994;330:377.
Navab F, Steingrub J. Stress ulcer: Is routine prophylaxis necessary? Am J Gastroenterol. 1995; 90:708.
Cook DJ, Laine LA, Guyatt GH, Raffin TA. Nosocomial pneumonia and the role of gastric pH - a meta-analysis. Chest. 1991;100:7.
Guidelines for the management of adults with hospital-acquired, ventilator-associated, and healthcare-associated pneumonia. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005;171:388.
Steinberg KP. Stress-related mucosal disease in the critically ill patient: risk factors and strategies to prevent stress-related bleeding in the intensive care unit. Crit Care Med. 2002;30(6 Suppl):S362-364.
Conrad SA, Gabrielli A, Margolis B, et al. Randomized, double-blind comparison of immediate-release omeprazole oral suspension versus intravenous cimetidine for the prevention of upper gastrointestinal bleeding in critically ill patients. Crit Care Med. 2005;33(4):760-765.
Dial S, Delaney JA, Barkun AN, Suissa S. Use of gastric acid-suppressive agents and the risk of community-acquired Clostridium difficile-associated disease.JAMA. 2005;294(23):2989-2995.
4. Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT) Prophylaxis
Applying deep venous thrombosis prophylaxis is an appropriate intervention in all patients who are sedentary; however, the higher incidence of deep venous thrombosis in critical illness justifies greater vigilance.
Geerts WH, Pineo GF, Heit JA, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism: the Seventh ACCP Conference on Antithrombotic and Thrombolytic Therapy. Chest. 2004;126(3 Suppl):338S-400S.
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to complications of using central venous catheters
Intervention level: All level 1, 2, 3 and 3T units in which CVCs are used
• Central venous catheters (CVCs) are being used increasingly in the inpatient and outpatient setting to provide long-term venous access. CVCs disrupt the integrity of the skin, making infection with bacteria and/or fungi possible. Infection may spread to the bloodstream and haemodynamic changes and organ dysfunction (severe sepsis) may ensue, possibly leading to death. Approximately 90% of the catheter-related bloodstream infections (CR-BSIs) occur with CVCs.
Mermel LA. Prevention of intravascular catheter-related infections. Ann Intern Med. 2000;132(5):391-402.
• Forty-eight percent of US intensive care unit (ICU) patients have central venous catheters, accounting for about 15 million central-venous-catheter-days per year in ICUs. Approximately 5.3 central line infections (often termed catheter-related bloodstream infections) occur per 1,000 catheter days in US ICUs. The attributable mortality for such central line infections is approximately 18%. Thus, probably about 14,000 deaths occur annually due to central line infections. Some estimates put this figure as high as 28,000 deaths per year.
Pittet D, Tarara D, Wenzel RP. Nosocomial bloodstream infection in critically ill patients. Excess length of stay, extra costs, and attributable mortality. JAMA. 1994;271:1598-1601.
Saint S. Chapter 16. Prevention of intravascular catheter-related infection. Making health care safer: a critical analysis of patient safety practices. AHRQ evidence report, number 43, July 20, 2001.
Berenholtz SM, Pronovost PJ, Lipsett PA, et al. Eliminating catheter-related bloodstream infections in the intensive care unit. Crit Care Med. 2004;32:2014-2020.
• In addition, nosocomial bloodstream infections prolong hospitalization by a mean of 7 days. Estimates of attributable cost per bloodstream infection are estimated to be between $3,700 and $29,000.
Soufir L, Timsit JF, Mahe C, Carlet J, Regnier B, Chevret S. Attributable morbidity and mortality of catheter-related septicemia in critically ill patients: a matched, risk-adjusted, cohort study. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 1999;20(6):396-401.
The Central Line Bundle
Care bundles, in general, are groupings of best practices with respect to a disease process that individually improve care, but when applied together may result in substantially greater improvement. The science supporting each bundle component is sufficiently established to be considered the standard of care.
The central line bundles are two groups of evidence-based interventions for patients with intravascular central catheters that, when implemented together, result in better outcomes than when implemented individually.
Elements of the Welsh Central Line Insertion Bundle
• Wash hands before and after procedure: soap and water or alcohol-based agents.
• Use barrier precautions: gown and gloves must be worn; as much as possible of the patient should be covered with sterile drapes.
• Sterilise skin with 2% chlorhexidine in alcohol and wait until the skin is dry.
• Avoid the femoral site unless it is the last resort.
Elements of the Welsh Central Line Maintenance Bundle
• Review necessity of central line every day - and remove promptly if it is not needed.
• TPN should be given via a separate line or a dedicated lumen.
• Access to line must be made using a clean technique.
• Entry site to be checked every day for signs of leakage or inflammation and line removed promptly if these signs are present.
This is not intended to be a comprehensive list of all elements of care related to central lines; rather, the bundle approach to a small group of interventions promotes teamwork and collaboration. Other elements of care, such as daily site care and selection of dressing material, may be recommended in guidelines from the CDC and others. These are not excluded for any purpose other than to have bundles that are focused.
The WCCIP has introduced the CVC bundles into adult general ICUs. This programme aims to ensure that the bundles are used in all clinical areas where CVCs are inserted and cared for.
Compliance with the central line bundle can be measured by simple assessment of the completion of each item. The approach has been most successful when all elements are executed together, an “all or none” strategy.
Preventing Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infections – Components of Care
Hand hygiene
One way to decrease the likelihood of central line infections is to use proper hand hygiene. Washing hands or using an alcohol-based waterless hand cleaner helps prevent contamination of central line sites and resultant bloodstream infections.
O'Grady NP, Alexander M, Dellinger EP, et al. Guidelines for the prevention of intravascular catheter-related infections. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. MMWR Recomm Rep. Aug 9 2002;51(RR-10):1-29.
Maximal barrier precautions
A key change to decrease the likelihood of central line infections is to apply maximal barrier precautions in preparation for line insertion.
Mermel LA, McCormick RD, Springman SR, Maki DG. The pathogenesis and epidemiology of catheter-related infection with pulmonary artery Swan-Ganz catheters: a prospective study utilizing molecular subtyping. Am J Med. Sep 16 1991;91(3B):197S-205S.
Raad, II, Hohn DC, Gilbreath BJ, et al. Prevention of central venous catheter-related infections by using maximal sterile barrier precautions during insertion. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. Apr 1994;15(4 Pt 1):231-238.
Chlorhexidine skin antisepsis
Chlorhexidine skin antisepsis has been proven to provide better skin antisepsis than other antiseptic agents such as povidone-iodine solutions.
Maki DG, Ringer M, Alvarado CJ. Prospective randomised trial of povidone-iodine, alcohol, and chlorhexidine for prevention of infection associated with central venous and arterial catheters. Lancet. 1991 Aug 10;338(8763):339-343.
Chaiyakunapruk N, Veenstra DL, Lipsky BA, Saint S. Chlorhexidine compared with povidone-iodine solution for vascular catheter-site care: a meta-analysis. Ann Intern Med. 2002 Jun 4;136(11):792-801.
Optimal catheter site selection, with subclavian vein as the preferred site for non-tunneled catheters in adults
Percutaneously inserted catheters are the most commonly used central catheters. In a recent prospective observational study assessing catheters placed by a critical care medicine department in a university teaching hospital, the site of insertion did not alter the risk of infection. The authors concluded that the site of insertion was not a risk factor for infection when experienced physicians insert the catheters, strict sterile technique is used, and trained intensive care unit nursing staff performs catheter care.
Deshpande KS, Hatem C, Ulrich HL, et al. The incidence of infectious complications of central venous catheters at the subclavian, internal jugular, and femoral sites in an intensive care unit population. Crit Care Med. 2005;33:13.
Mermel LA, McCormick RD, Springman SR, Maki DG. The pathogenesis and epidemiology of catheter-related infection with pulmonary artery Swan-Ganz catheters: a prospective study utilizing molecular subtyping. Am J Med. Sep 16 1991;91(3B):197S-205S.
McCarthy MC, Shives JK, Robison RJ, Broadie TA. Prospective evaluation of single and triple lumen catheters in total parenteral nutrition. J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 1987 May-Jun;11(3):259-262.
Richet H, Hubert B, Nitemberg G, et al. Prospective multicenter study of vascular-catheter-related complications and risk factors for positive central-catheter cultures in intensive care unit patients. J Clin Microbiol. 1990;28:2520.
Collignon P, Soni N, Pearson I, et al. Sepsis associated with central vein catheters in critically ill patients. Intensive Care Med. 1988;14:227.
Merrer J, Jonghe BD, Golliot F, et al. Complications of femoral and subclavian venous catheterization in critically ill patients. A randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2001;286:700.
Daily review of central line necessity with prompt removal of unnecessary lines
Daily review of central line necessity will prevent unnecessary delays in removing lines that are no longer clearly needed for the care of the patient. Many times, central lines remain in place simply because they provide reliable access and because personnel have not considered removing them. However, it is clear that the risk of infection increases over time as the line remains in place and that the risk of infection decreases if the line is removed.
O'Grady NP, Alexander M, Dellinger EP, et al. Guidelines for the prevention of intravascular catheter-related infections. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. MMWR Recomm Rep. Aug 9 2002;51(RR-10):10.
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to severe sepsis
Intervention level: All level 0,1,2,3 and 3T units
The term sepsis covers a number of infectious diseases that result in a common picture of multiple organ failure. It is a condition with high prevalence – about 2.3% of hospital patients and about 27% of intensive care patients 1, 2. Mortality rates are very high – around 30 – 50%. In Wales this equates to the deaths of between 700-1100 people in ICU annually. Globally, sepsis kills about half a million people a year: as many as myocardial infarction.
Until recently sepsis has had a low public profile. Reporting of cause of death on death certificates often omits the term sepsis so its prevalence has been under-reported. Effective treatments have been hard to come by. Times are changing though and there is a growing international consensus both on the scale of the challenge and the practical ways to bring down mortality rates 3.
The good news is that the most effective treatments are simple interventions such as giving oxygen, large volumes of intravenous fluids and antibiotics 4. The main challenge is that these treatments must be given early in the disease process to be effective. The main focus then has to be on the early identification of patients with sepsis and in delivery of a package of treatments within a few hours of the onset of the disease. These simple targets are hard to achieve and require us to redesign how patients are monitored and treated throughout the hospital.
1. Angus DC et al. Epidemiology of severe sepsis in the United States: analysis of incidence, outcome and associated costs of care. Critical Care Medicine 2001; 29; 1303-10
2. Padkin AM et al. Epidemiology of severe sepsis occurring in the first 24 hours in intensive care units in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Critical Care Medicine 2003: 31; 2332–8
1. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International Guidelines for Management of Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock 2008. Crit Care Med. 2008; 36(1): 296-327
2. Rivers E et al. Early goal-directed therapy in the treatment of severe sepsis and septic shock. N Engl J Med 2001; 345: 1368-1377
Surviving Sepsis Campaign
The Surviving Sepsis Campaign is an International campaign to reduce mortality and morbidity from sepsis by 25% over a 5 year period through the introduction of Sepsis Care Bundles. These bundles consist of interventions that have solid evidence in improving mortality.
These consist of 2 elements; the first 6 hours from the diagnosis of Severe Sepsis or Septic Shock (time zero) known as the Resuscitation Bundle and the first 24 hours from diagnosis known as the Management Bundle.
Early experience with the bundles at The University Hospital of Wales (UHW) and Neville Hall Hospital (NHH) highlighted the following difficulties:
• Inconsistency in the early diagnosis of severe sepsis and septic shock
• Frequent inadequate volume resuscitation
• Late or inadequate use of antibiotics
• Frequent failure to support the cardiac output when depressed
• Frequent failure to control hyperglycemia adequately
• Frequent failure to use low tidal volumes and pressures in acute lung injury
• Frequent failure to treat adrenal inadequacy in refractory shock
To overcome these difficulties the SSC care bundles have, in some areas, been operationalised into a care pathway with achievement of the so called ‘sepsis six’ within 1 hour of severe sepsis diagnosis. The evidence base behind the implementation of Sepsis Care Bundles/Pathway:
Early recognition of severe sepsis and septic shock, with early aggressive resuscitation aimed at meeting defined goals [Rivers E, et al. Early recognition of severe sepsis and septic shock, with early aggressive resuscitation aimed at meeting defined goals. New England Journal of Medicine. 2001;345(19):1368-1377.]
Early use of appropriate antibiotics [Iregui M, et al. Clinical importance of delays in the initiation of appropriate antibiotic treatment for ventilator-associated pneumonia. Chest. 2002;122(1): 262-268.]
Tight control of blood glucose [van den Berghe G, et al. Intensive insulin therapy in critically ill patients. New England Journal of Medicine. 2001;345(19):1359-1367.]
Low volume and low pressure ventilation for acute lung injury patients [The NIH-ARDS Network. Ventilation with lower tidal volumes as compared with traditional tidal volumes for acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome. New England Journal of Medicine. 2000;342(18):1301-1308.]
Use of activated protein C for severe sepsis [Bernard GR, et al. Efficacy and safety of recombinant human activated protein C for severe sepsis. New England Journal of Medicine. 2001;344(10): 699-709.]
Use of low-dose steroids in refractory septic shock [Annane D, et al. Effect of treatment with low doses of hydrocortisone and fludrocortisone on mortality in patients with septic shock. Journal of the American Medical Association. 2002;288(7):862-887.]
The Survive Sepsis Resuscitation Pathway can be obtained from:
Further information can be obtained from the following links:
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Goal: Reduce mortality and harm due to transmission of infection in critical care
Intervention level: All level 2, 3 and 3T units
The campaign is focusing on hand hygiene as a key measure in breaking the chain of cross infection and compliance with hand hygiene is one of the key process measures that the campaign will be looking at, however this should not be taken to mean that the other standard precautions are less important.
As hand hygiene compliance is considered to be a major factor in breaking the chain of infection, it will be one of the major process measures collected by the campaign, therefore there is more detail here regarding hand hygiene than for the other standard precautions.
Transient contamination of HCWs’ hands occurs while caring for colonised or infected patients. HCWs can contaminate their hands even while performing “low-risk” patient care activities such as taking a pulse or blood pressure, lifting a patient up in bed, or handling items in the patient’s vicinity.
Although wearing gloves when having direct contact with patients can reduce the risk of hand contamination, hands often are contaminated during glove removal. Therefore, cleaning hands before and after having contact with patients or their immediate environment is of paramount importance in reducing transmission of HCAI in health care facilities. Unfortunately, compliance with hand hygiene remains abysmal in many hospitals—often well under 50%. It is doubtful whether such low rates of compliance are compatible with efforts to dramatically reduce the rate of HCAI in health care.
When hands are heavily contaminated or visibly soiled, handwashing with soap and water is critical. Also when managing patients with diarrhoea it is imperative that washing with soap and water is undertaken as alcohol gels have poor activity against C. difficile and norovirus. Sinks must be conveniently located near the point of care.
Sinks with automatic controls or elbow faucet handles are preferred. If the water controls are hand-operated, personnel should turn them off with a clean paper towel. Alcohol hand rubs are the preferred method for general hand hygiene when hands are not heavily contaminated or visibly soiled. Alcohol hand rubs rapidly kill bacteria, including MRSA (but not Clostridium difficile spores), take far less time than handwashing, and are relatively gentle on the hands. Alcohol rub dispensers should be conveniently located directly at the point of care, as well as at numerous locations in the staff’s traffic pattern, to maximize adherence (Pittet et al., 2000).
The impact of a vigorous hand hygiene campaign was assessed in a widely-cited study from a teaching hospital in Geneva, Switzerland. Overall compliance with hand hygiene during routine patient care was measured before and during implementation of the campaign (Dec 1994 - Dec 1997), which included posters on handwashing and installation of alcohol-based hand rub dispensers by the patient’s bedside. Handwashing compliance increased from 48% in 1994 to 66% in 1997; consumption of alcohol-based rub solution increased concurrently. Healthcare Associated infection rates decreased significantly during this period (active surveillance was also in use during this time). The “Clean Your Hands Campaign” running in the UK since 2005, and the acknowledged importance of hand hygiene in controlling the transmission of antibiotic-resistant pathogens, should catalyse even higher rates of performance.
Most NHS Trusts in Wales are already engaged with the “Clean your Hands Campaign and there is now a drive to involve the community also. For further information visit the website
A study of handwashing frequency in ICUs in the 1980s (before alcohol-based hand rubs were widely used in the US) established “proof of concept” that personnel are more likely to wash their hands when appropriate equipment and supplies are readily available; in this case, compliance was greater when more sinks were placed in patient care areas. Similarly, appropriate use of alcohol-based rubs is far more likely if dispensers are widely available near the point of care. Of course, dispensers must not be empty, should be operational, and should dispense the correct amount of rub.
Pittet D, Mourouga P, Perneger TV. Compliance with handwashing in a teaching hospital. Infection Control Program. Ann Intern Med. 1999;130(2):126-130.
Lankford MG, Zembower TR, Trick WE, Hacek DM, Noskin GA, Peterson LR. Influence of role models and hospital design on hand hygiene of healthcare workers. Emerg Infect Dis. 2003;9(2):217-223.
Pittet D, Hugonnet S, Harbarth S, et al. Effectiveness of a hospital-wide programme to improve compliance with hand hygiene. Lancet. 2000;356(9238):1307-1312.
Bischoff WE, Reynolds TM, Sessler CN, Edmond MB, Wenzel RP. Handwashing compliance by health care workers. The impact of introducing an accessible, alcohol-based hand antiseptic. Arch Intern Med. 2000;160:1017-1021.
Kaplan LM, McGuckin M. Increasing handwashing compliance with more accessible sinks. Infection Control. 1986;7(8):408-410.
What changes can we make that will result in improvement?
Education and training in effective hand hygiene has been undertaken in the UK over many years a new approach is needed to improve the compliance rates significantly. In 2006, IHI prepared a How-to Guide on Hand Hygiene in collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC), and the Society of Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA). The Guide was endorsed by APIC and SHEA, and valuable input was provided by the World Health Organization's World Alliance for Patient Safety through the Global Patient Safety Challenge. The following four components of the hand hygiene intervention package are critical:
1. Clinical staff, including new staff and trainees, understand key elements of hand hygiene practice (demonstrate knowledge)
2. Clinical staff, including new staff and trainees, use appropriate technique when cleansing their hands (demonstrate competence)
3. Alcohol-based hand rub and gloves are available at the point of care (enable staff)
4. Hand hygiene is performed at the right time and in the right way and gloves are used appropriately as recommended by CDC’s Standard Precautions (verify competency, monitor compliance, and provide feedback)
5. Keep soap/alcohol-based hand hygiene dispensers prominently placed and make universal precautions equipment, such as gloves, only available near hand sanitation equipment.
6. Initiate a campaign using posters including photos of celebrated hospital doctors/employees recommending hand hygiene.
7. Create an environment where reminding each other about hand hygiene is encouraged.
Refer to the Hand Hygiene Guide for a full description of this intervention.
In the UK the Clean Your Hands campaign has encouraged improvements in hand hygiene through a high impact poster campaign, the use of champions and the promulgation of good access to alcohol gel preparations.
Teams should use the best approach for their needs as agreed through PDSA cycles on the units to bring the hand hygiene compliance above 95%. Various audit tools are available to assess hand hygiene compliance. The most commonly used in the UK are
1. Infection Practitioner’s Society (IPS formerly known as the ICNA) audit tool
2. The Lewisham tool
3. The Clean Your Hands Campaign audit tool, National Patient Safety Agency.
The first of these provides a tool which assesses the provision of facilities for hand hygiene for staff and patients as well as assessing training. This tool could be used for baseline and subsequent assessments of the availability of facilities and resources for hand hygiene. The second and third listed tools are probably more appropriate for regular assessment of hand hygiene compliance through observation.
All these tools are available through the WHAIP website (intranet reference address needed) as well as from the individual websites listed.
Goal: Reduce mortality and harm by the creation in critical care of an environment of collaboration and a culture of safety
Intervention level: All level 2, 3 and 3T critical care units
Leadership and Organisational Culture
Changing practice requires a change in organizational culture and attitudes about what is acceptable. Organisations that have nearly eliminated certain types of infections, such as ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and central line infections (BSLI), have moved towards a culture where these infections are viewed as completely preventable.
The organisational culture within an individual organisation, or even at the local level of a department or patient care unit, develops based on overt and subtle messages employees receive. Leadership actions strongly influence employee beliefs as to what leaders consider important, even more so than what is actually said. This includes not only what leaders do, but also what they do not do.
Teamwork is essential in health care today, and communication within the team is indicative of the organisational culture. Everyone must be considered as an equally important member of the team, regardless of their role, and not only encouraged to speak up, but required to do so. If non-clinical or non-professional (i.e., non-licensed or certified) staff are not treated as equal members of the team, they will be less likely to point out an unsafe condition or take action. For example, environmental services personnel are critical members of the team for infection prevention, not just the clinical personnel who provide direct patient care.
» What changes can we make that will result in improvement?
Understanding how organizational culture develops is important to changing it, and practical tools are available to effect change:
• Implement Leadership WalkroundsTM, a structured approach for senior leaders to talk directly with front-line staff about patient safety.
• Train staff in the use of SBAR, a structured format for communication which stands for Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation and establishes a clear layout of information in a manner that is non-threatening and allows for appropriate assertion.
• Conduct briefings on units to increase staff awareness by bringing them together for 5 to 10 minutes as part of the daily routine.
• Involve patients and families in processes, such as rounds.
Getting Started
Hospitals will not successfully implement these interventions overnight. If you do, chances are that you are doing something sub-optimally. A successful program involves careful planning, testing to determine if the process is successful, making modifications as needed, re-testing, and careful implementation.
• Select the team and the venue.
• Assess where you stand presently. Is there a process in place? If so, work with staff to begin preparing for changes.
• Organize an educational program. Teaching the core principles to staff will open many people’s minds to the process of change.
• Introduce the interventions to the staff.
Using the Model for Improvement
In order to move this work forward, the campaign team recommends using the Model for Improvement. Developed by Associates in Process Improvement, the Model for Improvement is a simple yet powerful tool for accelerating improvement that has been used successfully by hundreds of health care organizations to improve many different health care processes and outcomes.
The model has two parts:
• Three fundamental questions that guide improvement teams to 1) set clear aims, 2) establish measures that will tell if changes are leading to improvement, and 3) identify changes that are likely to lead to improvement.
• The Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycle to conduct small-scale tests of change in real work settings — by planning a test, trying it, observing the results, and acting on what is learned. This is the scientific method, used for action-oriented learning.
Implementation: After testing a change on a small scale, learning from each test, and refining the change through several PDSA cycles, the team can implement the change on a broader scale — for example, for an entire pilot population or on an entire unit.
Spread: After successful implementation of a change or package of changes for a pilot population or an entire unit, the team can spread the changes to other parts of the organization or to other organizations.
You can learn more about the Model for Improvement on .
Forming the Team
No single person can create system-level improvements alone. First, it is crucial to have the active support of leadership in this work. The leadership must make patient safety and quality of care strategic priorities in order for any infection reduction improvement team to be successful.
Once leadership has publicly given recognition and support (financial resource, person-time) to the programme each hospital will have its own methods for selecting a core team. The team should use the Model for Improvement to conduct small-scale, rapid tests of the ideas for improvement over various conditions in a pilot population. The team should also track performance on a set of measures designed to help them see if the changes they are making are leading to improvement, and regularly report these measures back to leadership.
The Campaign Team recommends a multidisciplinary team approach to patient care in critical care. Improvement teams should be heterogeneous in make-up, but homogeneous in mindset. The value of bringing diverse personnel together is that all members of the care team are given a stake in the outcome and work to achieve the same goal.
All the stakeholders in the process must be included, in order to gain the buy-in and cooperation of all parties. For example, teams without nurses are bound to fail. Teams led by nurses and therapists may be successful, but often lack leverage; physicians must also be part of the team.
Some suggestions to attract and retain excellent team members include using data to define and solve the problem; finding champions within the hospital who are of sufficiently high profile and visibility to lend the effort immediate credibility; and working with those who want to work on the project rather than trying to convince those that do not.
The team needs encouragement and commitment from an authority in the intensive care unit. Identifying a champion increases a team’s motivation to succeed. When measures are not improving fast enough, the champion re-addresses the problems with staff and helps to keep everybody on track toward the aims and goals.
Eventually, the changes that are introduced become established. At some point, however, changes in the field or other changes in the ICU will require revisiting the processes that have been developed. Identifying a “process owner,” a figure who is responsible for the functioning of the process now and in the future, helps to maintain the long-term integrity of the effort.
Setting Aims
Improvement requires setting aims. An organization will not improve without a clear and firm intention to do so. The aim should be time-specific and measurable; it should also define the specific population of patients that will be affected. Agreeing on the aim is crucial; so is allocating the people and resources necessary to accomplish the aim.
An example of an aim that would be appropriate for reducing CR-BSIs can be as simple as, “Decrease the rate of CR-BSIs by 50% within one year by achieving greater than 95% compliance with the central line bundle.”
Teams are more successful when they have unambiguous, focused aims. Setting numerical goals clarifies the aim, helps to create tension for change, directs measurement, and focuses initial changes. Once the aim has been set, the team needs to be careful not to back away from it deliberately or "drift" away from it unconsciously.
First Test of Change
Once a team has prepared the way for change by studying the current process and educated the affected parties, the next step is to begin testing the intervention.
• Begin using the intervention with one patient.
• Work with each nurse who cares for the patient to be sure they are able to follow the bundle and implement the checklist and daily goals sheet.
• Make sure that the approach can be carried over from shift to shift to eliminate gaps in teaching and utilization.
• Process feedback and incorporate suggestions for improvement.
• Once the intervention has been applied to one patient and subsequent shifts, increase utilization to the remainder of the ward/unit.
• Engage in additional PDSA cycles to refine the process and make it more reliable.
Barriers That May Be Encountered
• Fear of change
All change is difficult. The antidote to fear is knowledge about the deficiencies of the present process and optimism about the potential benefits of a new process.
• Communication breakdown
Organizations have not been successful when they failed to communicate with staff about the importance of the interventions, as well as when they failed to provide ongoing teaching as new staff become involved in the process.
Measurement
Measurement is the only way to know whether a change represents an improvement. The systems for collection of the process data on compliance with the care bundles as part of WCCIP were developed by the individual units and therefore contain some variation in approach.
However, there are several common features. In all but one unit the system was paper based and relied upon the bedside nurse ensuring that a form, similar to that below, was completed on a daily basis.
Bundle elements were ticked as completed, signed if not completed and reasons for exclusion from the bundle recorded.
Figure 1 – bedside ventilator compliance form
| |Yes |No |Clinical |
| | | |Exclusion |
|DVT Prophylaxis |√ | | |
|GU Prophylaxis | |√ | |
|Head Elevation - 30° |√ |√ |√ |
|Sedation Hold |√ | | |
Bundle compliance was ‘all or nothing’ in that patients were only considered compliant if all elements of the bundles had either been performed or a reason had been given for not doing so.
Daily compliance for the unit for all eligible patients upon that unit was recorded on a chart similar to that below
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Track Measures over Time
Improvement takes place over time. Determining if improvement has really occurred and if it is a lasting effect requires observing patterns over time. Run charts are graphs of data over time and are one of the single most important tools in performance improvement. Using run charts has a variety of benefits:
• They help improvement teams formulate aims by depicting how well (or poorly) a process is performing.
• They help in determining when changes are truly improvements by displaying a pattern of data that you can observe as you make changes.
• They give direction as you work on improvement and information about the value of particular changes.
Tips for Gathering Data
Use a form that allows you to record your efforts and track your success. In addition to helping improvement teams create run charts each month, a contemporaneous record documenting line placement and site care can help with prompting early removal. The decision as to whether the form becomes a permanent part of the medical record, or is simply used as a data collection tool, must be made locally at each hospital.
These strategies are particularly effective if used in conjunction with a Daily Goals assessment sheet. This form can be completed during daily rounds on the patient. Many organizations implement the central line bundle in tandem with the ventilator bundle to improve systematic care to patients in ICUs.
Critical Success Factors
Reflection on the WCCIP identified the following factors as critical to success in the implementation of the ventilator and central line care bundles in Welsh critical care.
Programme managers
Throughout the programme it was shown time and again that the most important factor in local success was the programme manager. These individuals showed extraordinary determination and resilience in motivating their teams and introducing innovation. They achieved this often in the absence of adequate funding and in some cases whilst having to overcome considerable resistance to change.
The programme manager training and study days proved to be popular with the programme managers themselves as both a source of support and as a means of acquiring practical skills. Protected time to fulfil this role was invaluable and it was noticeable that sites where this role was not backfilled struggled at times in maintaining the momentum.
Local Champions
Clinical and Managerial support for WCCIP locally was essential to the successful implementation and sustainability of the care bundle approach. The programme required substantial amounts of senior staff time in the planning, implementation and monitoring of the care bundles in the units, and without managerial and clinical support, this resource would not have been made available.
Patient involvement
At the outset of the programme, patient involvement was not common within critical care across Wales. Patient involvement on the National Steering Group was key to ensuring the right questions were asked at key points in the programme, and promoted local involvement of patients and carers on improvement teams. These teams have since stated that this is a key element of their success, as it provides a unique perspective influence which NHS staff often overlook and underestimate.
Ownership of change
The collaborative approach NLIAH took to agreeing and implementing national bundles ensured buy-in from all sites, clinicians, nursing and therapies staff prior to implementation.
It is an often repeated axiom that for change to stick it must be owned by those affected by that change. There is ample evidence within the units’ progress reports that this is true. It may also be claimed that the audit process to evaluate the change itself is also most effective when developed and owned by those participating.
Links
Extensive evidence supports the care recommendations in this Guide. Selected references as well as practical tools are available on 1000livescampaign.wales.nhs.uk
The WCCIP Year one Report, which contains many practical examples of implementation of care bundles, can be downloaded at wccip.wales.nhs.uk or by contacting Chris Hancock at Christopher.Hancock@nliah.wales.nhs.uk
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Create an environment of collaboration and culture of safety
Involve Leadership in safety
Processes
• Inclusion of patient/ public representation on local critical care improvement team
• Integrate patient/family into improvement work
• Promote open communication among team and family
Improve Critical Care
Rapid response to acutely ill patients (Shared with medical/surgical improvement, surgical complications and leadership)
Provide patient and family driven care
Reliable processes are contained in the NICE guidance (50) on identification and treatment of acute illness and include
• Establishment of and training for a whole hospital early warning system
• Development of and training in graded risk based response to acute illness
• Audit process and outcomes
• Inclusion of Trust board management, referring medical teams and ward staff in audit feedback process
Processes
• Multi disciplinary rounds and daily goal setting
• Ensure staff have knowledge and expertise in improvement work
• Ensure communication and collaboration within a multi disciplinary team
• Appropriate infrastructure: intensivist led model
Integrate leadership into improvement efforts
Reduce complications from:
• Ventilators
• Central lines
• Severe Sepsis
• HCAIs
Reliable processes of care:
• Ventilator management
• Central line management
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• Hand hygiene
Content Area
Drivers
Interventions
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