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Guidelines reduce blood draws in critically ill kids

Johns Hopkins clinicians caring

for a child in the pediatric ICU

Photo courtesy of

Johns Hopkins Medicine

New research suggests clinical practice guidelines can reduce the number of potentially unnecessary blood culture draws in critically ill children without endangering doctors’ ability to diagnose and treat sepsis.

The guidelines consist of 2 documents—a screening checklist and a decision algorithm.

In a single-center study, clinicians consulted these documents when considering ordering blood cultures for patients in a pediatric intensive care unit (ICU).

The clinicians said there was an immediate reduction in unnecessary blood draws after they began using these guidelines, and they were able to sustain the reduction over time.

Aaron Milstone, MD, of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, and his colleagues described these results in JAMA Pediatrics.

The guidelines were created by a team of nurses, vascular access specialists, and physicians across specialties. The team created a fever/sepsis screening checklist and an accompanying decision-making flow chart designed to guide clinicians in the decision to draw blood.

These tools were posted in the pediatric ICU at The Johns Hopkins Hospital with instructions to be completed at the bedside by nurses and physicians. Each week, the team would meet to evaluate the data gathered, review how many cultures were sent from the unit, and discuss in detail individual cases where blood draws were necessary.

The researchers compared patient length of stay, mortality, readmission, and the number of episodes of suspected septic shock at the hospital before and after this intervention was implemented.

In the year before the team introduced the tools, there were 2204 patient visits to the pediatric ICU and 1807 blood cultures drawn.

After the intervention, there were 984 blood cultures drawn for 2356 patient visits, almost halving the number of blood cultures per patient day.

Comparing the pre- and post-intervention periods, there was no statistical difference in the occurrence of septic shock, hospital mortality, or hospital readmission.

Dr Milstone said this means patients experienced no increased risk of a missed sepsis diagnosis because of the intervention.

He and his colleagues said the future directions of this research include further exploring the implications this intervention may have for antibiotic use as well as working to implement the tools in other ICUs. The tools are already being tried at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in Florida and in the pediatric ICU at the University of Virginia.

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Johns Hopkins clinicians caring

for a child in the pediatric ICU

Photo courtesy of

Johns Hopkins Medicine

New research suggests clinical practice guidelines can reduce the number of potentially unnecessary blood culture draws in critically ill children without endangering doctors’ ability to diagnose and treat sepsis.

The guidelines consist of 2 documents—a screening checklist and a decision algorithm.

In a single-center study, clinicians consulted these documents when considering ordering blood cultures for patients in a pediatric intensive care unit (ICU).

The clinicians said there was an immediate reduction in unnecessary blood draws after they began using these guidelines, and they were able to sustain the reduction over time.

Aaron Milstone, MD, of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, and his colleagues described these results in JAMA Pediatrics.

The guidelines were created by a team of nurses, vascular access specialists, and physicians across specialties. The team created a fever/sepsis screening checklist and an accompanying decision-making flow chart designed to guide clinicians in the decision to draw blood.

These tools were posted in the pediatric ICU at The Johns Hopkins Hospital with instructions to be completed at the bedside by nurses and physicians. Each week, the team would meet to evaluate the data gathered, review how many cultures were sent from the unit, and discuss in detail individual cases where blood draws were necessary.

The researchers compared patient length of stay, mortality, readmission, and the number of episodes of suspected septic shock at the hospital before and after this intervention was implemented.

In the year before the team introduced the tools, there were 2204 patient visits to the pediatric ICU and 1807 blood cultures drawn.

After the intervention, there were 984 blood cultures drawn for 2356 patient visits, almost halving the number of blood cultures per patient day.

Comparing the pre- and post-intervention periods, there was no statistical difference in the occurrence of septic shock, hospital mortality, or hospital readmission.

Dr Milstone said this means patients experienced no increased risk of a missed sepsis diagnosis because of the intervention.

He and his colleagues said the future directions of this research include further exploring the implications this intervention may have for antibiotic use as well as working to implement the tools in other ICUs. The tools are already being tried at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in Florida and in the pediatric ICU at the University of Virginia.

Johns Hopkins clinicians caring

for a child in the pediatric ICU

Photo courtesy of

Johns Hopkins Medicine

New research suggests clinical practice guidelines can reduce the number of potentially unnecessary blood culture draws in critically ill children without endangering doctors’ ability to diagnose and treat sepsis.

The guidelines consist of 2 documents—a screening checklist and a decision algorithm.

In a single-center study, clinicians consulted these documents when considering ordering blood cultures for patients in a pediatric intensive care unit (ICU).

The clinicians said there was an immediate reduction in unnecessary blood draws after they began using these guidelines, and they were able to sustain the reduction over time.

Aaron Milstone, MD, of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, and his colleagues described these results in JAMA Pediatrics.

The guidelines were created by a team of nurses, vascular access specialists, and physicians across specialties. The team created a fever/sepsis screening checklist and an accompanying decision-making flow chart designed to guide clinicians in the decision to draw blood.

These tools were posted in the pediatric ICU at The Johns Hopkins Hospital with instructions to be completed at the bedside by nurses and physicians. Each week, the team would meet to evaluate the data gathered, review how many cultures were sent from the unit, and discuss in detail individual cases where blood draws were necessary.

The researchers compared patient length of stay, mortality, readmission, and the number of episodes of suspected septic shock at the hospital before and after this intervention was implemented.

In the year before the team introduced the tools, there were 2204 patient visits to the pediatric ICU and 1807 blood cultures drawn.

After the intervention, there were 984 blood cultures drawn for 2356 patient visits, almost halving the number of blood cultures per patient day.

Comparing the pre- and post-intervention periods, there was no statistical difference in the occurrence of septic shock, hospital mortality, or hospital readmission.

Dr Milstone said this means patients experienced no increased risk of a missed sepsis diagnosis because of the intervention.

He and his colleagues said the future directions of this research include further exploring the implications this intervention may have for antibiotic use as well as working to implement the tools in other ICUs. The tools are already being tried at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in Florida and in the pediatric ICU at the University of Virginia.

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