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SCIP: Preventing Surgical Site Infections

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Title: SCIP: Preventing Surgical Site Infections


1
SCIPPreventing Surgical Site Infections
  • Gary Kanter, M.D.
  • Betsy Lehman Center
  • December 4, 2007

2
www.medqic.org/sip
3
Surgical Care Improvement Project
  • National Quality Partnership
  • CMS,CDC
  • Reduce nationally the incidence of surgical
    complications by 25 by 2010
  • (13,027 deaths, 271,055 complications)/yr
  • Focus on
  • Surgical infection prevention
  • Adverse cardiac events
  • Prevention of DVT
  • Post operative pneumonia
  • Using evidence based medicine

4
How often do patients receive scientifically
indicated care in this country?
  • Near 100- we are doing a great job
  • 75- not too shabby
  • 55- flip a coin
  • What does science have to do with medicine?
  • McGlynn, et al The quality of health care
    delivered to adults in the United States. NEJM
    2003 348 2635-2645 (June 26, 2003)

5
How often do patients receive scientifically
indicated care in this country?
  • Near 100- we are doing a great job
  • 75- not too shabby
  • 55- flip a coin
  • What does science have to do with medicine?
  • McGlynn, et al The quality of health care
    delivered to adults in the United States. NEJM
    2003 348 2635-2645 (June 26, 2003)

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Surgical Infection (SI) Epidemiology Impact
  • Account for 14-16 of all Hospital Acquired
    Infections (HAI)
  • 2-5 of operative patients will develop SI
  • 0.8-2 million infections a year
  • SI increase LOS
  • Average 7.5 additional days
  • Excess costs
  • 130-845 million per year
  • Adds 2,734 - 26,019 per pt (average 3,000)
  • Pain and suffering

11
SI Epidemiology Impact
  • Patients who develop infection are
  • 60 more likely to spend time in an ICU
  • 5 times as likely to be readmitted
  • Have a mortality rate twice that of noninfected
    patients
  • An estimated 40-60 of these infections are
    preventable

12
Business Case for SCIP
APU increased to 2
13
Business Case for SCIP
14
Baystate Medical Center
  • 700 bed tertiary care referral center
    (population of 1M)
  • Flagship of Baystate Health
  • 41 k admissions/year
  • Annual surgical volume 29,043
  • Western Campus of TUFTS
  • Member CoTH, 9 residency programs, 244 residents
  • 1200 member medical staff, 206 faculty MDs
  • Level 1 Trauma Center
  • IHI Mentor Hospital Surgical Infection Prevention

15
Use of antimicrobial prophylaxis for major
surgery baseline results from the National
Surgical Infection Prevention Project Arch
Surg. 2005 Feb140(2)174-82.
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Quality Improvement Process
  • Benchmarking, measurement, and feedback
  • Work with key physician champions
  • Disseminate recommendations to educate
  • Use physician order entry
  • Enlist help of case managers as quality safety
    net
  • Use PDSA cycles to test and improve

18
Prophylactic Antibiotics
  • Antibiotics given for the purpose of preventing
    infection when infection is not present but the
    risk of post-operative infection is present

19
Prophylactic AntibioticsQuestions
  • Which cases benefit?
  • When should you start?
  • Which drug should you use?
  • How much should you give?
  • How long should antibiotics be continued?

20
Recently Updated Antibiotic Recommendations
For the purposes of national performance
measurement a case will pass the antibiotic
selection performance measure if vancomycin is
used for prophylaxis (in the absence of a
documented beta-lactam allergy) if there is
physician documentation of the rationale for
vancomycin use (effective for July 2006
discharges).
21
Recently Updated Antibiotic Recommendations
(continued)
Ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, gatifloxacin, or
moxifloxacin (effective for July 2006
discharges). For the purposes of national
performance measurement, a case will pass the
antibiotic selection indicator if the patient
receives oral prophylaxis alone, parenteral
prophylaxis alone, or oral prophylaxis combined
with parenteral prophylaxis.
22
Prophylactic AntibioticsQuestions
  • Which cases benefit?
  • When should you start?
  • Which drug should you use?
  • How much should you give?
  • How long should antibiotics be continued?

23
Timing of Antibiotic ProphylaxisGI Operations
Stone HH et al. Ann Surg. 1976184443-452.
24
Perioperative Prophylactic AntibioticsTiming of
Administration
14/369
15/441
1/41
1/47
Infections ()
1/81
2/180
5/699
5/1009
Hours From Incision
Classen. NEJM. 1992328281.
25
Antibiotic Timing Related to Incision
Bratzler DW, Houck PM, et al. Arch Surg.
2005140174-182.0
26
Visual Prompt and data collection
27
Never Underestimate the Power of Competition
BMC AB Timing by Anesthesiologist
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Quality IndicatorsNational Surgical Infection
Prevention Project
  • Quality Indicator 2
  • Proportion of patients who receive prophylactic
    antibiotics consistent with current
    recommendations

33
Antibiotic Recommendation Sources
  • American Society of Health System Pharmacists
  • Infectious Diseases Society of America
  • The Hospital Infection Control Practices Advisory
    Committee
  • Medical Letter
  • Surgical Infection Society
  • Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy 2003

34
Antibiotic Selection - Successful
Interventions
  • Distribution of guidelines to perioperative staff
    (standardize practice)
  • Antibiotic selection and ordering (standardize
    process, opt out for selection)
  • Decision aids in the system (active prompt )
  • Use of cephalosporins and vancomycin/gentamicin
    in penicillin allergic patients
  • Reviewed and revised AB selections in computer
    order sets (opt out, forcing function)

35
Clin Infect Dis. 2004381706-1715.
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Expanded pt populations
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  • Quality Indicator 3
  • Proportion of patients whose prophylactic
    antibiotics were discontinued within 24 hours of
    surgery end time

42
Discontinuation of Antibiotics
Patients were excluded from the denominator of
this performance measure if there was any
documentation of an infection during surgery or
in the first 48 hours after surgery.
Bratzler DW, Houck PM, et al. Arch Surg.
2005140174-182.
43
Antibiotic Prophylaxis Duration
  • Most studies have confirmed efficacy of ? 12
    hours
  • Many studies have shown efficacy of a single dose
  • Whenever compared, the shorter course has been as
    effective as the longer course

44
Papers Comparing Duration of Peri-op Antibiotic
Prophylaxis
  • Colorectal 3
  • Mixed GI 4
  • Hysterectomy 3
  • Gyn GI 1
  • Head Neck 3
  • Orthopedic 4
  • Vascular 3
  • Cardiac __7__
  • Total 28
  • Papers supporting longer duration 1

45
  • Duration of prophylactic antibiotic
    administration should not exceed the 24-hour
    post-operative period
  • Prophylactic antibiotics should be discontinued
    within 24 hours of the end of surgery
  • Medical literature does not support the
    continuation of antibiotics until all drains or
    catheters are removed and provides no evidence of
    benefit when they are continued past 24 hours

http//www.aaos.org/wordhtml/papers/advistmt/1027.
htm
46
Consequences of Prolonged AB Use
  • Increased antibiotic and drug administration
    costs
  • Increased antibiotic-associated complications
  • Increased patterns of antibiotic resistance
  • Clostridium difficile Enterocolitis
  • Colonization with MRSA

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Barriers Antibiotic Use
  • Timing
  • Consistency
  • Sustainability (constant monitor)
  • Selection
  • Resistance (surgeons and organism)
  • Availability national consensus issues
  • Duration
  • Knowledge gap
  • If its not broke, don't change it

53

NNISS Benchmark 2-11
Surgical Infection Rate
1.13
54
Duration of Antibiotic ProphylaxisWhat is Best
for Our Patients?
  • Antibiotic prophylaxis is one of many methods for
    reducing the incidence of SSI
  • There is a lack of evidence that antibiotics
    given after the end of the operation prevent SSIs
  • There is evidence that increased use of
    antibiotics promotes antibiotic resistance

55
Glycemic Control
56
Diabetes Complications
  • Estimated 10 million Americans
  • Poor glucose control is associated with
  • Increased risk of infection
  • Delayed healing
  • Increased mortality
  • Blunts inflammatory response

57
Diabetes, Glucose, Control and SI
Infections ()
Latham,ICHE 2001 22607-12
58
Glucose Control and Deep Sternal Wound Infections
Furnary et al. Ann Thorac Surg 199967352
59
Survival increased with intensive insulin therapy
( nondiabetic patients included ) targeting BG
80-110 mg/dL
Van den Berghe et al. NEJM 2001 3451359-1367
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Glycemic Control
  • Established IV insulin protocol for cardiac
    surgery patients with known diabetes (Pre-op BG
    75 mg/dl) and all others (Pre-op BG 150 mg/dl)
  • The protocol was developed by surgeons,
    anesthesiologists, endocrinologists, and nursing
  • Insulin infusions to be initiated in OR
  • Insulin infusion to be used for the duration of
    post-op period while the patient is in cardiac
    intensive care unit (CICU)
  • Endocrine referral if insulin infusion is
    utilized
  • Conversion protocol (IV infusion to sliding scale)

62
Diabetes, Glucose Control, SIsICHE 2001 22
607-12
  • Summary
  • Peri-operative hyperglycemia and diabetes are
    associated with increased risk of SIs
  • Early diagnosis of diabetes among high-risk
    patients may have short and long-term benefits

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Hair RemovalPre-operative Shaving
  • Shaving the surgical site with a razor induces
    small skin lacerations
  • Potential sites for infection
  • Disturbs hair follicles which are often colonized
    with S. aureus
  • Risk greatest when done the night before
  • Patient education
  • be sure patients know that they should not do you
    a favor and shave before they come to the
    hospital!

65
Shaving, Clipping SI
Infections ()
Alexander. Arch Surg 1983 118347
66
Hair Removal
  • Preoperative shaving of the surgical site the
    night before an operation is associated with a
    significantly higher SI risk than either the use
    of depilatory agents or no hair removal
  • Do not remove hair preoperatively unless the hair
    at or around the incision site will interfere
    with the operation (Category IA)
  • If hair is removed, remove immediately before the
    operation, preferably with electric clippers
    (Category IA)

67
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2006 Apr 19(2)
  • Three trials involving 3193 patients
  • Compared shaving with clipping
  • Statistically significantly more SSIs when people
    were shaved rather than clipped (RR 2.02, 95CI
    1.21 to 3.36)

68
Interventions
  • Razors removed from ORs
  • Razors removed from most clinical areas
  • Patients may use razors for personal hygiene

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HYPOTHERMIA
  • Increased myocardial ischemia VT
  • Bleeding and increased transfusion requirements
  • Surgical wound infections prolonged
    hospitalizations
  • Lower pain threshold
  • Drug metabolism decreased

71
Temperature and SSI Following Colectomy
  • Normo (N104) Hypo (N96) P
  • SSI 6 18 .009
  • Collagen dep 328 254 .04
  • Time to eat 5.6d 6.5d

Kurz. NEJM 19963341209
72
Normothermia
  • Standardization
  • Pre warm
  • Removed random number generators
  • One device and one measure (first PACU temp)
  • Review by patient populations
  • Education/communication
  • Room set point pre-op
  • Increased temperature upon pt arrival to room
    until draped
  • Staff comfort balanced against patient centered
    care
  • Products
  • Forced hot air
  • Warm fluids
  • Cooling vests
  • Temporal thermometers

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Barriers - Normothermia
  • Staff comfort
  • Expense
  • Knowledge gap
  • Impact
  • Importance
  • Consistent application

75
Potentially PreventableThis complication may not
have occurred with the application of every
indicated prevention measure
  • Apparently Unavoidable
  • Despite the application of every indicated
    prevention measure the complication occurred
    anyway
  • A mystery

76
Surveillance
  • List of patients sent to each surgeon, 30 days
    post procedure
  • 97 return rate (SASE, interoffice mailing)
  • Self report any post operative infection/
    comments
  • Daily admissions with wound infection
  • Review for surgical date and s/s infection
  • Daily microbiology reports of all cultures
    reviewed for wound, fluid cultures, e.g joint
    aspirates
  • Charts reviewed for NNIS criteria, surgical date
    and s/s infection

77
Investigation
  • NNIS criteria ASA, Wound Class, Length of
    Procedure
  • Presence of interventions
  • Antibiotic use
  • Surgical prep and skin condition
  • Implants
  • Cluster evaluation
  • Specific conditions of the patient
  • Surgical environment
  • Organism
  • Surgical team

78
Potentially Preventable Review
  • All infections reviewed for potential
    preventability using SCIP guidelines
  • Reviewed using other criteria as well
  • Review done by IC dept and fed back to multiple
    cmts (COI, SCIP, SPIT, SAQI)
  • System level changes made when applicable
  • Consistently, 50 of infections have a SCIP
    miss!!

79
Where Do Things Fall Through the Cracks?
  • System information, tests, diagnoses
  • Communication
  • Hand offs
  • Failure to recognize
  • Failure to activate
  • Failure to rescue

80
Improvement Tools
  • Systems
  • Populations
  • Cycles of Change
  • PDSA, Six Sigma, LEAN
  • Process Analysis
  • Failure Mode Identification
  • BH PI Tool Kit

81
Keys to Success
  • Persistence and reinforcement/high visibility
  • Senior leader support
  • Multidisciplinary cooperation collaboration
  • Accurate, timely and relevant data
  • Right people
  • Willing to try changes and take a risk
  • Develop reliable systems (strive for 10-2 90)
  • Incorporate into workflow
  • Make changes easy and transparent
  • Stress importance of impact on patient and
    practitioner
  • Make The Right Thing The Easy Thing

82
Lessons Learned
  • Involve all stakeholders
  • Leave your stripes at the door
  • Must have physician champions- credible
  • Be humble
  • Take more blame and give more credit
  • BROAD shoulders
  • Must work as team
  • Small tests of change with frequent tempo
  • Small pilot population
  • Work within your culture
  • Steal shamelessly
  • Make the right thing the easy thing

83
  • Medicine used to be simple, ineffective, and
    relatively safe.
  • Now it is complex, effective, and potentially
    dangerous.
  • Sir Cyril Chantler
  • 1999 Hollister Lecture at Northwestern
    University, Illinois
  • James, B. 16th IHI Conference

84
For More Information
  • Gary Kanter, M.D.
  • gary.kanter_at_bhs.org
  • Department of Anesthesiology
  • Baystate Medical Center
  • Springfield MA 01199
  • 413 794 3520
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