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Title: Author: Improvement Programme Review Team


1
MRSA/HCAI Improvement Programme Shrewsbury
Telford NHS Trust Final Report
Author Improvement Programme Review
Team Version Final version Date 30th March 2007
2
Contents Section 1 1.1 Executive summary 1.2
Your key message immediate priorities 1.3 Data
analysis 1.4 Suggested target milestones 1.5
Actions for recovery improvement 1.6
Encouraging signs Section 2 2.1 Key
themes Findings and recommendations 2.2
People 2.3 Performance 2.4 Process 2.5
Practice Section 3 3.1 Recommended performance
reporting 3.2 Recovery plan

Links
Acknowledgements
Section 1
Section 2
Section 3
3
Contents Section 1 1.1 Executive summary 1.2
Your key message immediate priorities 1.3 Data
analysis 1.4 Suggested target milestones 1.5
Actions for recovery improvement 1.6
Encouraging signs Section 2 2.1 Key
themes Findings and recommendations 2.2
People 2.3 Performance 2.4 Process 2.5
Practice Section 3 3.1 Recommended performance
reporting 3.2 Recovery plan
Links
Content Page
Acknowledgements
Section 2
Section 3
4
1.1 Executive summary
  • You met your target in year one but are
    struggling to meet it this year. There are
    pockets of good practice throughout the trust and
    a general desire to be proactive rather than
    reactive in reducing MRSA bacteraemias but this
    will need a direct focus and an immediate
    recovery plan implemented to reach trajectory and
    deliver your target.
  • your 06/07 (April to November) trajectory is 22
    and you experienced 36 MRSA Bacteraemias
  • the biggest challenge you have is identifying the
    root cause of your bacteraemias and this requires
    your immediate attention. Immediately carry out
    root cause analysis (RCA) to ascertain source and
    cause of all MRSA bacteraemias and backdate for
    the last three months
  • your data shows that 77 of your bacteraemias
    occur after 48 hours, of which 33 are within
    Augmented Care. You need to ensure there are no
    avoidable MRSA bacteraemias in Augmented Care
    with immediate effect and maintain this
  • you need to demonstrate a 50 improvement in your
    top 5 specialties in the next 6 months, i.e
    general medicine, general surgery, nephrology and
    general intensive care unit
  • your data suggests that 23 of your bacteraemias
    occur pre-48 hour. Carry out immediate bespoke
    analysis of pre-48 hour MRSA bacteraemias for
    patients admitted 3 months prior to having
    acquired MRSA in hospital. Work with partners to
    understand cause, and reduce number of pre-48
    hour cases. Reduce by at least 50 by May 07 and
    by at least a further 50 by August 07
  • ensure month on month improvements in all areas
  • You achieved your MRSA trajectory target last
    year but breached the MRSA trajectory target this
    year. The organisation, as a whole, needs to
    maintain an attitude of awareness and diligence
    to assist recovery against trajectory. Commitment
    to infection prevention and control is evident
    and the sense of importance and urgency held by
    the Chief Executive needs to be translated to all
    levels of the organisation. Your new Divisional
    structure will give you the opportunity to
    promote joint working and enhance communication
    across the organisation. Nominated clinical leads
    are required for all specialties to own and drive
    this initiative, moving away from a culture
    whereby the Infection Control Team led and owned
    all that was associated with infection prevention
    and control. Ensuring everyone understands their
    role, responsibility and accountability is also
    fundamental. Utilisation of the High Impact
    Interventions (HIIs) in specific and focused
    areas as highlighted by the improved RCA will
    lead you to make progress faster. Finally,
    improvements in screening and the use of
    antibiotics will all play an important part.
    Audit and surveillance are key to measuring your
    progress against infection prevention and control
    and should be formalised and fed back to the
    clinical areas as soon after completion as
    possible.
  • We have highlighted a number of areas in this
    report which should improve your performance
    towards reducing the levels of MRSA bacteraemia.
    The review team has included in this report key
    performance improvement statements with
    timescales for specific improvement outcomes. You
    need to embed within the culture that it is an
    insult to give patients infections.

5
1.2 Your key message and immediate priorities
  • Your key message is
  • Accountable and responsible care delivery will
    support a reduction in healthcare-associated
    infection
  • Immediate implementation of the following 3
    actions will start you on your journey of
    reducing your MRSA bacteraemias (please see the
    embedded document in section 1.5 for your further
    actions)
  • initiate root cause analysis within 24 hours of
    bacteraemia identification and complete and
    feedback to your multi-disciplinary team within 5
    days
  • develop and share performance information that is
    understood and owned by all levels of the
    organisation
  • instil a culture that reducing MRSA bacteraemias
    is everyones responsibility

6
1.3 Data analysis
  • data in the following slides are from your
    submitted MESS data December 2005 to November 2006

7
1.3.1 What is the direction of travel?
The challenge is significant to be where you need
to be in March 2008
8
1.3.2 Number of MRSA cases split by Specialty
- A look at your problem areas
Areas to target are General Medicine General
Surgery.
9
1.3.3 Number of MRSA cases split by Pre- and
Post-48 Hours
The table shows that in the last 12 months, 23
of your bacteraemias were pre-48hr cases. N.B.
The national average is 28.
Suggestion look at your pre 48 hour patients
and see if they have been to hospital in the
previous 3 months from when their MRSA
Bacteraemia was identified
10
1.3.4 Number of MRSA cases by Age Band
The breakdown of your MRSA cases by age band
It is recommended that you compare this MRSA Age
band profile with your admission data (esp. in
the higher age bands) to ensure that no age band
has a significant disproportionate number of
cases.
11
1.3.5 What is the scale of your challenge?
Your MRSA figures have recently been above
trajectory. This situation needs to be reversed.
Actual (A)
Trajectory (T)
12
1.3.6 Number of MRSA cases split by Augmented
Care Non-Augmented Care
The table shows that in the last 12 months, 33
of your cases occurred in Augmented Care. N.B.
The national average is 24. The target is to
have zero avoidable infections in Augmented Care.
The table below provides a breakdown of where
your augmented cases are occurring.
13
1.4 Suggested target milestones
Actions Milestones
A robust recovery plan is required immediately to deliver agreed monthly trajectory by May 2007 Immediately carry out robust root cause analysis to ascertain the source and cause of your MRSA bacteraemias and identify any trends You can make significant improvement in MRSA bacteraemia by at least 50 in General Medicine, General Surgery and renal dialysis by end of May 2007 Carry out bespoke analysis of pre-48 hour MRSA bacteraemias and determine how many of them have had previous hospital admissions in the previous three months Work closely with partner organisations to reduce number of pre-48 hour MRSA bacteraemias. Instigate joint root cause analysis to uncover source. Avoidable MRSA bacteraemia in Augmented Care should be zero To get on trajectory and then move further faster In the six months between June 06 and Nov 06you had 15 cases in General Medicine. Reduce this by at least 50 to 7 or less by May 07 six in General Surgery. Reduce this by at least 50 to three or less by May 07 You have reported four cases in renal dialysis in the past 3 months. Reduce this by at least 50 to two or less by May 07 Reduce pre-48 hour cases by 50 by May 07 Ensure you have zero avoidable cases in Augmented with immediate effect
Further reduction of MRSA bacteraemias by at least 50 in General Medicine, General Surgery and renal dialysis by end of August 2007 Further work with partner organisations to reduce number of pre-48 hour MRSA bacteraemias by a further 50 by August 2007 Maintain zero avoidable MRSA bacteraemias in Augmented Care Month on month reduction in MRSA bacteraemias beyond trajectory Reduction In Breaches by May 2007 General Medicine from 10 to five or less by August 07 Nephrology from four to two or less by August 07 General Surgery from three to one or less by August 07 Reduce pre-48 hour cases by 50 by August 07 Maintain 0 by August 07

14
1.5 Actions for recovery and improvement
  • We have worked through some of your actions that
    we suggest need to be undertaken in the short
    term. These are based on our findings during our
    2 day review.
  • You may wish to expand on these as you develop
    this action plan locally for the medium to long
    term and consider the wider findings in section 2
    of this report

Double Click to Launch
15
1.6 Encouraging signs
  • the Chief Executive and the Trust Board now have
    a strong focus on patient safety and improving
    the patient experience
  • there is a very dedicated infection control team,
    members of which are valued and respected across
    the trust.
  • the Director of Infection Prevention and Control
    is highly regarded throughout the trust by all
    interviewed staff groups
  • the organisation has many dedicated clinicians
    and staff, some working in less than ideal
    environments, and all committed to making a
    difference
  • the outreach team have a model for early warning
    signs for sepsis that could be adapted for MRSA
  • there is evidence of some early root cause
    analysis being undertaken across the trust
    despite the challenges of IT support
  • there are some good examples of practice in ITU,
    including the use of gloves and aprons, hand
    hygiene, dedicated CVC management and packs and
    general compliance with EPIC guidelines.


continued/
16
1.6 Encouraging signs
/continued
  • there are several education streams for awareness
    raising, clinical training and clinical skills
    updating accessible for staff
  • standards of cleaning were reported and observed
    to be very high within the trust despite
    benchmarking of domestic staffing level
    demonstrating low numbers compared with other
    trusts


17
Contents Section 1 1.1 Executive summary 1.2
Your key message immediate priorities 1.3 Data
analysis 1.4 Suggested target milestones 1.5
Actions for recovery improvement 1.6
Encouraging signs Section 2 2.1 Key
themes Findings and recommendations 2.2
People 2.3 Performance 2.4 Process 2.5
Practice Section 3 3.1 Recommended performance
reporting 3.2 Recovery plan
Links
Content Page
Acknowledgements
Section 1
Section 3
18
2.1 Key themes
Performance
People
Performance frameworks Performance framework
ownership Use of data Performance data
Audit Pre-48 hour cases
Leadership Training Directorate
responsibilities and ICT Roles responsibilities
MRSA bacteraemia reduction
Processes
Practices
Hand hygiene High impact interventions Screening
decolonisation Antibiotics Root cause analysis
Bed management and transfers Storage space

19
2.2.1 People
Leadership
Findings
  • the Chief Executive is clearly committed to
    tackling MRSA and meets with the DIPC for a one
    to one meeting every month, receives monthly
    trajectory data and is informed of every
    bacteraemia as it occurs
  • the review team is not convinced that the sense
    of urgency and importance and ownership is
    embedded at all levels of the organisation
  • many staff and managers expressed the view that
    the trust had only just taken stock of its
    position with regard to MRSA relying on the fact
    that it achieved its trajectory target last year
  • the only clinical champion for infection control
    identified by staff in the trust was the DIPC,
    nominated leads are not in place in all
    specialties

Recommendations
Chief Executive, Trust Board, DIPC and Infection Control Team commitment to be supported by a high profile clear communication strategy of the key messages, consistent action, and role modelling to signal the required change and the importance and urgency of the agenda
Ensure MRSA target delivery is of equal importance to other key targets and translated to directorates, teams and individuals objectives accordingly, to ensure delivery and then performance managed
Reducing infection must be seen to be everyones business with clear responsibly, accountability and performance management
Appoint medical clinical leads within each specialty and performance manage specific objectives
Play a key role in the DH MRSA Programme Performance Improvement Network. Disseminate timely, accurate and appropriate information to all staff to encourage a culture of continuous learning, improvement and sharing of best practice
20
2.2.2 People
Training
Findings
  • the trust has several arms responsible for
    clinical skills training and updating. However
    there is no collaborative approach to these, nor
    are they standardised or consistent across the
    trust
  • infection control team are responsible for the
    delivery of all mandatory training, stretching
    available resources
  • there is a need to review the training and
    ongoing compliance with aseptic procedures and
    antibiotic prescribing

Recommendations
Deliver a trust-wide clinical skills training strategy and consider alternatives to training techniques such as videos. Clarify specific objectives for those with responsibility and accountability
Monitor training to observe application into practice and modify accordingly. Consider devolving responsibility for day to day infection control and prevention to clinical level and make better use of link nurse role
Link antimicrobial prescribing to a clear policy. Review the current training in antibiotic/antimicrobial prescribing and ensure availability for all medical staff including juniors
Deliver both multidisciplinary and junior doctor aseptic procedure training and then audit to gain local ownership and harvest maximum gains
21
2.2.3 People
Directorate responsibilities and
infection control team
Findings
  • the review team was unable to find widespread
    evidence of responsibility and objectives for
    infection prevention and control at Divisional
    level
  • there are many dedicated matrons and link nurses
    however the DIPC is attempting to drive this
    largely on his own with limited support
  • the infection control team are unclear how they
    will be integrated into the performance
    management framework

Recommendations
The focus of activity must be based around directorates, with the ICT enabling rather than undertaking the bulk of activity. Clinical leads within each directorate or speciality will be key to successful implementation, supported by clear objectives and outcome measures
Ensure that clinical leadership is engaged at Divisional level, with clear responsibilities and accountabilities for engagement, reporting and delivering improvements. Responsibilities need to be explicit in clinical director job descriptions
Achieving the target needs to be everyones business. Broaden engagement of Divisions and management teams by strengthening performance management arrangements, setting specific Divisional and sub-divisional team targets using a balanced score card approach to hold teams to account. Immediately identify a nominated lead for each speciality and ensure that the role is underpinned with measurable objectives and a reporting framework
Clear responsibilities and accountabilities must be underpinned with focused objectives for all members of the directorate including clinical directors, clinical managers,and link nurses
22
2.2.4 People
Roles responsibilities
Findings
  • whilst there is evidence of infection control
    responsibilities within some job descriptions and
    objectives, individuals and teams did not always
    appear to understand what that meant for them,
    what they had to do differently, and where
    responsibilities were shared or individual
  • roles and responsibilities were not always fully
    understood in relation to the MRSA target

Recommendations
Accelerate plans to formalise infection control in staff job descriptions and discuss thoroughly at appraisals and personal performance development meetings, in addition to team or directorate meetings and performance manage this
Ensure that consultants are aware of their accountability and responsibility for the infection control practice of their juniors and are appropriate role models. Escalate their engagement in clinical governance to deliver updates and key messages
Re state the roles and responsibilities and accountabilities of the consultants, infection control and matrons to ensure understanding of individual and shared responsibilities and performance manage through regular 11s
Ensure the Medical Director has the detailed data he needs to be effective in his role
23
2.3.1 Performance
Performance frameworks
Findings
  • an adequate level of MRSA bacteraemia data is not
    embedded in the Board performance reporting
    arrangements
  • targets are not set for each Division to deliver
    against and own and embed within core business
  • the current forums run to address MRSA issues do
    not have appropriate remits or representation by
    clinicians or multidisciplinary teams to ensure
    action and delivery

Recommendations
Use the new Divisional structure to develop bottom up plans to combat MRSA especially in identified hotspot areas
Include information on where hotspots are in Board papers and include a monthly update report of actions being taken to address HCAI
Each Division to have a target set for MRSA bacteraemias each month against which its performance should be measured even if it zero. This includes a breakdown by clinical teams and individual clinicians in a timely manner as information becomes available
Divisions to be held accountable through performance frameworks for its performance against the MRSA bacteraemia reduction target
Each MRSA bacteraemia should be treated as a breach and performance managed
Review the current mechanisms of engagement of clinicians and multi-disciplinary teams in the agenda and ensure appropriately established. For clinicians, incorporate in the peer review, service mortality, morbidity review meetings
24
2.3.2 Performance
Performance framework ownership
Findings
  • whilst progress has been made to focus activity
    within some specialties, the infection control
    team appear to be undertaking the majority of the
    work

Recommendations
Medical Director, Deputy Chief Executive and DIPC should work together to develop a strategic approach to reduce HCAI and to agree their individual roles, responsibility and actions
Responsibilities need to be explicit in clinical director job descriptions and job plans
Increase engagement of Divisions, identify clinical leads within each Division or speciality and implement action plans supported by the ICT
Agree measurable outcomes with objectives that are focused and incorporated within the performance management outcomes for the directorate
25
2.3.3 Performance
Use of data
Findings
  • data related to MRSA and other targets is
    discussed at every public board meeting
  • the trust intend to develop key performance
    indicators for infection prevention and control
    as part of the performance management
    arrangements within the new divisional structures
  • feedback from root cause analysis can often be
    slow and of limited value above identification of
    obvious factors.
  • follow up action is not always monitored
  • poor documentation with relation to intravenous
    line insertion was observed by the review team

Recommendations
Raise awareness of the value of MESS data in better targeting of interventions. Report all MRSA bacteraemias as a critical incident or Serious Untoward Incident. Integrate into governance and risk arrangements. Undertake a more robust root cause analysis on each bacteraemia to understand cause and source
Review the current root cause analysis approach used and consider using the newly developed NPSA RCA tool or components of it to be able to identify trends in individuals, teams, environmental issues, sources, case mix issues, collective training and development needs
Ensure timely reporting of root cause analysis findings and appropriate feedback, across the health economy where appropriate. Performance manage and monitor and ensure interventions are targeted
Develop a standardised method for documentation of peripheral line insertion and daily assessment performance manage completion daily
26
2.3.4 Performance
Performance data
Findings
  • your data shows that 33 of your MRSA
    bacteraemias are within Augmented Care. This is
    above the national average (24)
  • other hotspot areas are General Medicine (51)
    and General Surgery (22)
  • 23 of bacteraemias were diagnosed as being
    present within 48 hours of admission. This is
    below the national average (28)

Recommendations
Understand sources of your bacteraemias both pre- and post-48 hours to enable focus on the hot spots. Provide basic information and simple messages to staff on MRSA and mechanism of transfer. Adopt more rigorous and evidence based approaches in using data in order to provide the required focus, create the sense of importance and urgency required. Gain greater engagement across the trust and provide assurances to the Board
Use robust and timely enhanced surveillance data to identify which wards and departments have the greatest numbers of bacteraemias and interrogate own trust data to understand sources. Use clinical leads to overcome any data credibility issues.
Ensure a fit for purpose IT system is in place which supports infection control activities in respect of providing information for surveillance and monitoring. Use rigorous methods to identify which areas in General Medicine, Geriatric Medicine and General Surgery require focus in addition to the attention that renal services should be receiving
Using the HIIs within these areas should enable faster progress to be made. Set local reduction targets, dates for attainment and owners. Focus on your hotspots
Complete, sign off and submit MESS data weekly with situational reports and share across the organisation for early use in learning and performance management
27
2.3.5 Performance
Pre-48 hour cases
Findings
  • 23 of bacteraemias were diagnosed as being
    present within 48 hours of admission, this is
    below the national average (28)

Recommendations
The pre-48 hour group of patients would suggest that some of this group are readmissions or frequent attenders with chronic conditions. Use the root cause analysis tool to identify the source and any contributing factors and look to see if patients have been in hospital 3 months prior to contracting the bacteraemia
Work with the PCTs on further engagement and management of those cases identified
You should address specific issues in Nephrology that may relate to efficiency or permanent vascular access or other dialysis practices, including screening and preventative decolonisation
Once the the source of the pre-48 hour bacteraemias has been identified, review screening and decolonisation protocols in light of the findings. Your figures are suggestive of re-admissions and may require a health economy approach with support from the SHA and PCT
Escalate the work with the health economy partners to reduce the pre-48 hour cases
Ensure RCA of your pre-48 hour cases are fed back into your organisation in a timely manner
28
2.3.6 Performance
Audit
Findings
  • whilst the review team was informed of the many
    audits that had been conducted, there were
    numerous ward staff who were unaware of the
    results from these audits
  • there did not appear to be a mechanism for
    sharing learning from the audits within or across
    specialties nor with future induction, education
    and training, personal development plans and
    performance monitoring frameworks
  • most audits related to HCAI were undertaken by
    the infection control team

Recommendations
Use the root cause analysis tool and hot spot areas to focus work for High Impact Interventions and audit
Structure an audit calendar for the organisation and feed the results into directorate performance management to ensure actions are monitored and owned
Establish a mechanism for sharing and spreading good practice and learning across the trust
Link the results of audit into future induction, education and training, personal development plans and performance monitoring frameworks
Involve link nurses and clinical nurse managers more fully in audit activity, feedback and action
Ensure small frequent audits are undertaken when you are focusing on changing culture and practice. Timely feedback is key to ensuring sustainable improvement
29
2.4.1 Process
Bed management and transfers
Findings
  • the review team were made aware that there was a
    new devolved structure for bed management within
    the organisation
  • the trust has wider issues in terms of flow and
    bed management in relation to whole system demand
    management

Recommendations
Ensure bed management policies minimise patient movement and that these are accessible, applicable and adhered to. Due to the numbers of outliers, consider practice and policies in relation to screening and decolonisation for high risk patients. Review the processes for identifying patients requiring isolation or precautions on wards and spread good practice. Ensure at-risk patients are ring fenced or segregated. Review the input and attendance of the infection control team at bed management meetings.
Ensure all staff are aware of and know how to access the flag system on the computer for current and previously MRSA positive patients
Continue to work on improving flow and efficiency and work with partners on securing a whole system solution which incorporates demand management, real alternatives to admission for relevant patients and proactive seven days a week discharge planning
30
2.4.2 Process
Storage space
Findings
  • on the whole, clinical areas visited by the
    review team appeared clean and uncluttered
  • one clinical area observed to present an issue
    with space and storage was the renal dialysis
    ward at Shrewsbury. Patient areas were very close
    together with little room between one patient and
    the next. It is recognised this is not conducive
    to good infection control management and
    additional stations have been opened at Telford.
    In addition the trust is actively pursuing
    further investment for more stations.

Recommendations
Ensure sinks are accessible for all to use
Find alternative storage space for unused equipment
31
2.5.1 Practice
Hand hygiene
Findings
  • audits of hand hygiene have shown a variable rate
    of compliance of across staff groups within the
    organisation 88 for nursing staff and 78 for
    medical staff.
  • for the most part, the review team found that the
    alcohol hand rub or gel was available at the
    point of care delivery, with the exception of one
    or two observed areas

Recommendations
Continue to state the message to all staff that improved compliance with hand hygiene is a priority for the trust and set a target for compliance of 95 across the trust. Ensure all relevant staff understand the rationale behind the need to use gloves, when to wash hands, and when to use gel or rub. Audit through the High Impact Interventions and performance manage to ensure all staff, whether touching a patient or not, decontaminate their hands on entry and exit to clinical areas and always at the point of care
Increase the frequency of hand hygiene audits to be undertaken by clinical managers, publish the results and take any appropriate action. Promote the use of alcohol hand rub as the gold standard for routine hand hygiene when appropriate
Escalate the education and awareness, training and auditing, particularly in areas identified by the root cause analysis as the main areas of focus
Undertake daily/weekly audits in all wards and staff groups who do not adhere to the 95 hand hygiene compliance
Ensure results are fed back weekly to all staff
Consider using league tables as a feed back measure
32
2.5.2 Practice
High impact interventions
Findings
  • Some High Impact Interventions are used in some
    of the critical care areas. However the High
    Impact Interventions are not owned widely across
    the trust and are not always being implemented in
    response to the RCA, and could therefore be more
    focused

Recommendations
Undertake robust root cause analysis and prioritise the implementation of the High Impact Interventions for relevant areas
Ensure the utilisation of the High Impact Interventions are owned by the directorates, with clear responsibility and accountability and linked to governance and performance. Performance manage and audit documentation
Observational audit and challenge at point of insertion of lines to become everyday practice. Review and target the training programmes, link audits to individual development programmes
33
2.5.3 Practice
Screening decolonisation
Findings
  • there is confusion in some areas around who and
    when to screen
  • there is a lack of consistency in applying
    decolonisation for high risk patients
  • it was suggested to the review team that some
    elective patients who were screened at
    pre-assessment were not decolonised prior to
    admission

Recommendations
Use national evidence and the recent DH guidance to review and re-launch the screening and decolonisation policies. Provide consistent clarification to staff in relation to screening of all high risk patients (surgery, critical care, elderly care, regular or repeat admissions and admissions from nursing home or residential care homes) as recommended in national guidance (Guidelines for the Control and Prevention of MRSA in Healthcare Facilities by BSAC, HIS, ICNA working party on MRSA)
Use Patient Group Directives (PGD) for decolonisation of MRSA positive patients
Ensure the policies are interpreted and adhered to appropriately and audit compliance. Performance manage and feed back to Divisions and departments
Consider rapid screening for MRSA following business case review
34
2.5.4 Practice
Antibiotics
Findings
  • there is evidence that long courses of
    antibiotics are given
  • the trust has an antibiotic pharmacist for two
    sessions only
  • two sets of antibiotic guidelines exist across
    the trust
  • there is no policy for changing from intravenous
    to oral antibiotics
  • many patients were treated with intravenous
    antibiotics for longer than 2-3 days
  • large amounts of ciprofloxacin

Recommendations
Decrease use of quinolones Consider only prescribing by referral to the microbiologist
Introduce intravenous to oral switch policy after 2-3 days
Review pharmacy skill mix workforce and ways of working with microbiology to deliver maximum gain
Implement automatic stop policy
Empower nurses to challenge antibiotic prescribing and duration
35
2.5.5 Practice
Root cause analysis
Findings
  • root cause analysis is currently undertaken by
    the DIPC but is not as robust as future
    requirements dictate. It is not always
    disseminated to the clinical teams in a timely
    manner, therefore it is not always owned by the
    Divisions and clinical teams
  • there is a reluctance to take ownership for root
    cause analysis at directorate level
  • appropriate and timely action is not always taken
    as a result of the analysis of each MRSA
    bacteraemia

Recommendations
Review the rationale and importance of RCA and roles, responsibilities and accountabilities within the trust and communicate to the trust Board
Review the current RCA approach used and develop a more robust approach. Consider using the NPSA RCA tool or components of it to be able to identify trends in individuals, teams, environmental issues, sources, case mix issues, collective training and development needs, etc. Commence RCA within 24 hours of confirmation of an MRSA bacteraemia and feed back of findings and action to clinical teams within 5 days.
Once a more robust approach has been developed and piloted, assign responsibility for undertaking RCA to an individual within the relevant Division who has the time, skills and status to investigate, action and follow-up all cases supported by infection control, DIPC and the risk management team
Ensure timely reporting of RCA findings and appropriately feed back across the health economy where appropriate. Performance manage and monitor and ensure interventions are targeted
Each relevant consultant to report to their Divisional governance group on the findings of RCA and action taken to support learning. Performance manage through existing governance structures
Complete the risk factors page on MESS to ensure a robust data set for learning is available to your organisation
36
Contents Section 1 1.1 Executive summary 1.2
Your key message immediate priorities 1.3 Data
analysis 1.4 Suggested target milestones 1.5
Actions for recovery improvement 1.6
Encouraging signs Section 2 2.1 Key
themes Findings and recommendations 2.2
People 2.3 Performance 2.4 Process 2.5
Practice Section 3 3.1 Recommended performance
reporting 3.2 Recovery plan
Links
Content Page
Acknowledgements
Section 1
Section 2
37
3.1 Recommended performance reporting
  • Report on actions for recovery and improvement
    through
  • the use of the MRSA improvement programme actions
    for recovery and improvement template to track
    progress and report performance into existing
    governance structures
  • population of the non-mandatory enhanced
    facilities on the HPA MESS reporting system to
    track and analyse key problem areas
  • undertake robust root cause analysis and share
    widely- where are the sources of your
    bacteraemias?
  • body site and cause, eg leg wound, CVC lines etc
  • which wards are your hotspot areas?
  • are there any trends with specific clinicians?
  • where do you need to focus your efforts?
  • what clinical practice/culture needs to change
  • Monday morning sign off (with a situational
    report) of all your previous weeks bacteraemias
    and upload to MESS every Monday afternoon
  • call or meet with the SHA lead, DH MRSA programme
    manager, trust implementation lead and others
    from your organisation as appropriate (weekly to
    begin with)
  • three month review with members of the PCT, SHA,
    Department of Health and trust to demonstrate
    grip and delivery
  • this report needs to be put on the agenda and
    discussed at your open trust Board meeting

38
3.2 Recovery plan
  • your recovery plan is embedded below. Can you
    please populate in light of your recent learning,
    our visit and this report. Please then arrange
    for it to be signed by your Chief Executive and
    your host PCT Chief Executive and send to your
    programme manager, kath.harris_at_dh.gsi.gov.uk and
    Sally Batley, Deputy Head, MRSA Improvement
    Programme, sally.batley_at_dh.gsi.gov.uk
  • use the MRSA improvement programme actions for
    recovery and improvement (embedded in section
    1.5) to track progress and report performance
    into existing trust governance structures

39
Acknowledgements

The review team would like to acknowledge all
staff within Shrewsbury Telford NHS trust for
their time, honesty and hospitality during the
preparation and delivery of this intensive two
day review

Links
Content Page
Section 1
Section 2
Section 3
40
Your key message and immediate priorities
  • Your key message is
  • Accountable and responsible care delivery will
    support a reduction in healthcare-associated
    infection
  • Immediate implementation of the following 3
    actions will start you on your journey of
    reducing your MRSA bacteraemias (please see the
    embedded document in section 1.5 for your further
    actions)
  • undertake root cause analysis within 24 hours of
    bacteraemia identification and complete within 5
    days
  • develop and share performance information that is
    understood by all levels of the organisation
  • instil a culture that reducing MRSA bacteraemias
    is everyones responsibility
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