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Brad Winters, PhD, MD, FCCM Elizabeth C. Wick, MD

Building Y our SSI Prevention Bundle. Brad Winters, PhD, MD, FCCM Elizabeth C. Wick, MD ARMSTRONG INSTITUTE FOR PATIENT SAFETY AND QUALITY. What is your current role?. Polling Question. Surgeon Quality improvement practitioner Infection preventionist OR nurse OR technician

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Brad Winters, PhD, MD, FCCM Elizabeth C. Wick, MD

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  1. Building Your SSI Prevention Bundle Brad Winters, PhD, MD, FCCM Elizabeth C. Wick, MD ARMSTRONG INSTITUTE FOR PATIENT SAFETY AND QUALITY

  2. What is your current role? Polling Question • Surgeon • Quality improvement practitioner • Infection preventionist • OR nurse • OR technician • Anesthesiologist • OR manager • Educator • Other

  3. Learning Objectives • Use surgical care audit tools to gather data on the defects your staff identified in the PSSA • Create a performance goal for your team • Develop a feasible SSI Prevention Bundle that addresses up to three surgical care processes your team can improve • Describe how to proceed with improvements that don’t have a strong evidence base • Locate SUSP resources on the project website

  4. Background1 Surgical Site Infections (SSIs): • Are most common nosocomial infection in the surgical patient • Are most common complication after colorectal abdominal surgery (3-30%) • Are associated with increased length of stay, re-admission, and mortality • Cost between $6,200 - $15,000 / per patient (superficial - organ space)

  5. SSI Definitions2 Deep Purulent drainage from deep aspect of the wound Dehiscence Abscess on exam or CT scan Superficial Purulent drainage from wound Positive wound culture Pain, redness swelling Diagnosis by surgeon OrganSpace Infection in the surgical cavity (abdomen)

  6. JHH Colorectal Surgery Readmissions Readmission rate: 17.6% (2009-12)

  7. Pathogenesis of SSI Host Bacteria Procedure

  8. No Single SSI Prevention Bundle • Deeper dive into SCIP measures to identify local defects • Emerging evidence • Abx redosing and weight-based dosing • Maintenance of normogylcemia • Mechanical bowel preparation with oral abx • Standardization of skin preparation • Capitalize on frontline wisdom • CUSP / Staff Safety Assessment

  9. Deeper Dive Into SCIP Measures to Identify Local Defects

  10. Does SCIP give us enough information?

  11. NSQIP Report 2009

  12. Do you have… Polling Question Strong SSI performance Weak SSI performance Strong SCIP performance Weak SCIP performance Aand C Aand D Band C Band D

  13. Does your hospital have a colon SSI bundle? Polling Question Yes No

  14. Safety Issues & Improvement Opportunities4

  15. Michigan Surgical Quality Collaborative5 Perioperative Antibiotic Compliance

  16. Auditing Your Practice • Evaluate a sample of patients undergoing your targeted procedure for compliance with processes your team identified as potential areas to improve • For example, the next 10-20 patients • Adapt tool from SUSP website or develop new tool • Practical and feasible strategy to evaluate performance and surface defects • Empowers frontline staff

  17. How Do We Conduct Audits? • Retrospective chart review • Concurrent review • Place audit tool on chart • Complete over continuum of care • We recommend auditing 5-10 patients • Larger samples yield better estimates of performance • Your data does not need to be submitted

  18. Antibiotic Dosing: Gentamicin Interventions • Increased amount of gentamicin available in room • Added dose calculator in anesthesia record • Educated surgery, anesthesia, and nursing staff Despite a 95% compliance on SCIP!

  19. SUSP Antibiotic Audit Tool

  20. Normothermia Interventions • Confirmed that temperature probes were accurate (trial comparing foley and esophageal sensors) • Initiated forced air warming in the pre-operative area

  21. SUSP Normothermia Audit Tool (1 of 2)

  22. SUSP Normothermia Audit Tool (2 of 2)

  23. What about interventions with no data to support them?

  24. Separation of “Clean” and “Dirty” Instruments Intervention Built separate tray of instruments used for bowel anastomosis Extra suction along with both bovie tip and gloves opened and changed after anastomosis Educational sessions with scrub techs and nurses about instrument separation Real time audits

  25. Bringing Emerging Evidence for SSI Prevention to Your Patients

  26. Have you reviewed the new antibiotic guidelines? Polling Question Yes No

  27. Have you reviewed the draft HICPAC guidelines? Polling Question • Yes • No

  28. Emerging Evidence for SSI Prevention • Antibiotic Usage • Re-dosing • Weight based dosing of cephalosporins • Utilization of mechanical bowel preparation with oral antibiotics • Normoglycemia / Prevention of hyperglycemia • Standardization of skin preparation

  29. Source: ASHP6

  30. Redosing and Weight Based Dosing Bowel Prep

  31. JHU Antibiotic Poster Perioperative Antibiotic Prophylaxis To Prevent Surgical Site Infection

  32. Interventions to Improve Antibiotic Efficacy • Standardize weight-based dosing of cephalosporins • Standardize antibiotics re-dosing • Maintain therapeutic antibiotic serum levels throughout procedure • Reconsider the use of cefoxitin due to its short redosing interval • Audit your practice! • Standardize selections based on your hospital procedures • Engage surgery, nursing and anesthesia areas to implement a standard protocol • Consider integrating into EMR, if available • Audit your results and share success

  33. Hyperglycemia and Infection Goal Glucose <180mg/dl in all hospitalized patients Post-operative hyperglycemia is associated with an increased risk of SSI in general surgery patients. Background • Hyperglycemia is common in hospitalized patients • 38% of medical and surgical patients had hyperglycemia • 26% diabetic • 12% non-diabetic • In cardiac surgery, degree of post-operative hyperglycemia correlates with SSI, adopted as SCIP measures

  34. University of Washington/Glucose Control

  35. Could You Improve Glycemic Management? Multidisciplinary team members: • Endocrinology • Surgery • Anesthesiology • Nursing • Ward • Pre-op Audit your current practice Do you have a policy? Consider gathering a multidisciplinary team to develop a protocol for your hospital

  36. Preparation of the Surgical Site Best practice skin prep • Dual agent skin preparation • Chlorhexidine + alcohol OR • Povidone + iodine + alcohol • Include alcohol to increase durability of sterilization • Apply to specification, both in duration and amount • Must be dry before incision Background • 1012 bacteria reside on the skin • Staphlococcus and streptococcus species, among many others Goal of skin preparation Reduce bacterial burden on skin prior to incision

  37. ChloraPrep better than Betadine ChloraPrep and DuraPrep better than Betadine

  38. Is Skin Prep an Area You Could Improve? Audit your practices • What is being used for what cases? • Who is doing the prep? • How long are they taking for the prep? Develop an educational planthat engages frontline providers for standardization • In-services • Video education • Change doctor preference cards Audit again after implementing your interventions. How well did you do? Share the results!

  39. Key Takeaways • No single SSI prevention bundle exists.You need to identify the LOCAL defects. • Auditing is a practical and feasible strategy to evaluate performance and surface defects. • Tools provide a guideline and are adaptable to your local environment. • The CUSP methodology empowers frontline staff.

  40. Find tools at the project website Resources ARMSTRONG INSTITUTE FOR PATIENT SAFETY AND QUALITY https://armstrongresearch.hopkinsmedicine.org/susp.asp

  41. Action Items • Review staff safety assessment results • Pick 2-3 audit tools based on frontline feedback, SCIP measures and emerging evidence • Audit 5-10 patients with each tool • Create a performance goal for each intervention • Develop your bundle • Implement interventions for system changes • Share your tools, ideas for new tools and results

  42. References • Wick EC, Hobson DB, Bennett JL, et al. Implementation of a Surgical Comprehensive Unit-Based Safety Program to Reduce Surgical Site Infections. JACS. 2012; 215(2):193-200. • CDC/NHSN Surveillance Definitions for Specific Types of Infections. Rep. CDC, Jan. 2014;40-42. Web. 11 June 2014. www.cdc.gov/nhsn/PDFs/pscManual/17pscNosInfDef_current.pdf. • Hospital Compare. Medicare: the official U.S. government site for medicare.  Medicare.govWebsite. <http://www.medicare.gov/hospitalcompare/profile.html#profTab=2&ID=210009&loc=21287&lat=39.2962372&lng=-76.5928888&name=johns%20hopkins%20hospital> Accessed May 30, 2010 • http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/healthlibrary/conditions/surgical_care/surgical_site_infections_134,144/ • Hendren S, Englesbe MJ, Brooks L, et al. Prophylactic antibiotic practices for colectomy in Michigan. Am J Surg. 2011;201(3):290-293. • Clinical Practice Guidelines for Antimicrobial Prophylaxis in Surgery. American Society for Health-System Pharmacists. doi:10.2146/ajhp120568. American Journal of Health-System PharmacyFebruary 1, 2013 vol. 70 no. 3 p 582. http://www.ashp.org/surgical-guidelines.

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