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The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) designed the program to reduce surgical site infections (SSIs), which are harmful to patients and expensive for the health care system, wrote Della M. Lin, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and the department of surgery at the University of Hawaii, Honolulu, and her colleagues.
In a study published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons, the researchers reviewed data from a statewide intervention conducted at 15 hospitals in Hawaii from January 2013 to June 2015. The intervention included the Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program and individualized interventions for each hospital to help reduce SSIs. The primary outcome was the number of colorectal SSIs. A secondary outcome of hospital safety culture was assessed using the AHRQ Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture. The participating hospitals ranged from a 25-bed critical-access hospital to a 533-bed academic medical center.
Overall, the colorectal SSI rate decreased significantly (from 12% to 5%) from the first quarter of 2013 to the second quarter of 2015, with a significant linear decrease over the study period. The rate of superficial SSIs decreased significantly, falling from 8% to 3%. However, the rate of deep SSIs was not significantly different before and after the intervention program (2% vs. 0%), nor was the organ space SSI rate (3% vs. 2%). The standardized infection ratio decreased from 1.83 to 0.92.
The culture of safety in the hospitals improved, but more modestly, in 10 of 12 areas that were measured over the study period.
The overall perception of patient safety improved from 49% to 53%, teamwork across different units improved from 49% to 54%, management and support for patient safety improved from 53% to 60%, and nonpunitive response to errors improved from 36% to 40%.
In addition, communication and openness improved from 50% to 53%, frequency of reported events improved from 51% to 60%, feedback and communication about errors improved from 52% to 59%, organizational learning and continuous improvement increased from 59% to 70%, teamwork within units improved from 68% to 75%, and expectations and actions by supervisors and managers to promote safety improved from 58% to 64%. Staff responses reflect agreement on improvement in the areas of issues of communication, feedback mechanisms, and teamwork, but the change in culture was not on the order of the SSI change.
The most common interventions to reduce SSIs were the use of reliable chlorhexidine wash or wipe before surgery/surgical prep; appropriate use of antibiotics with respect to selection, dosage, and timing; standardized postsurgical debriefing; and differentiating clean/dirty/clean in the use of anastomosis trays and closing trays.
One bundle component, the implementation of the standard operating room debrief, was found to be of particular value to participants. The investigators noted that debrief questions such as “What went well?” and “What needs to be improved?” had “encouraged new processes of thinking beyond first-order problem solving. The debrief challenge embraced by the teams emphasized that ‘bundles’ did not consist of only technical interventions [e.g. clean/dirty trays, chlorhexidine gluconate wipes in preop], but embedded culture interventions—new processes for problem solving.”
The study findings were limited by several factors, such as the use of public SSI data that were not audited for accuracy and the inability to monitor the reliability of the implementation of the various interventions, the researchers said. In addition, “In this current study, there was a change in SSI rates and a change in safety culture, but correlations between the two were negligible or weak for most domains of safety culture,” they noted. The question of sustainability of the SSI improvement without the concomitant staff support of culture change was not addressed by the investigators.
However, the results suggest that a 62% decrease is robust, and that for some hospitals with a low volume of colorectal cases, “teams could attend to iteratively reduce surgical harm beyond SSI,” the researchers wrote.
The study was supported in part by the AHRQ. Dr. Lin disclosed serving as a board member and as a paid independent contractor to the Hawaii Medical Service Association. Her coauthors had no financial conflicts to disclose.
SOURCE: Lin DM et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2018 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.031.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) designed the program to reduce surgical site infections (SSIs), which are harmful to patients and expensive for the health care system, wrote Della M. Lin, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and the department of surgery at the University of Hawaii, Honolulu, and her colleagues.
In a study published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons, the researchers reviewed data from a statewide intervention conducted at 15 hospitals in Hawaii from January 2013 to June 2015. The intervention included the Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program and individualized interventions for each hospital to help reduce SSIs. The primary outcome was the number of colorectal SSIs. A secondary outcome of hospital safety culture was assessed using the AHRQ Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture. The participating hospitals ranged from a 25-bed critical-access hospital to a 533-bed academic medical center.
Overall, the colorectal SSI rate decreased significantly (from 12% to 5%) from the first quarter of 2013 to the second quarter of 2015, with a significant linear decrease over the study period. The rate of superficial SSIs decreased significantly, falling from 8% to 3%. However, the rate of deep SSIs was not significantly different before and after the intervention program (2% vs. 0%), nor was the organ space SSI rate (3% vs. 2%). The standardized infection ratio decreased from 1.83 to 0.92.
The culture of safety in the hospitals improved, but more modestly, in 10 of 12 areas that were measured over the study period.
The overall perception of patient safety improved from 49% to 53%, teamwork across different units improved from 49% to 54%, management and support for patient safety improved from 53% to 60%, and nonpunitive response to errors improved from 36% to 40%.
In addition, communication and openness improved from 50% to 53%, frequency of reported events improved from 51% to 60%, feedback and communication about errors improved from 52% to 59%, organizational learning and continuous improvement increased from 59% to 70%, teamwork within units improved from 68% to 75%, and expectations and actions by supervisors and managers to promote safety improved from 58% to 64%. Staff responses reflect agreement on improvement in the areas of issues of communication, feedback mechanisms, and teamwork, but the change in culture was not on the order of the SSI change.
The most common interventions to reduce SSIs were the use of reliable chlorhexidine wash or wipe before surgery/surgical prep; appropriate use of antibiotics with respect to selection, dosage, and timing; standardized postsurgical debriefing; and differentiating clean/dirty/clean in the use of anastomosis trays and closing trays.
One bundle component, the implementation of the standard operating room debrief, was found to be of particular value to participants. The investigators noted that debrief questions such as “What went well?” and “What needs to be improved?” had “encouraged new processes of thinking beyond first-order problem solving. The debrief challenge embraced by the teams emphasized that ‘bundles’ did not consist of only technical interventions [e.g. clean/dirty trays, chlorhexidine gluconate wipes in preop], but embedded culture interventions—new processes for problem solving.”
The study findings were limited by several factors, such as the use of public SSI data that were not audited for accuracy and the inability to monitor the reliability of the implementation of the various interventions, the researchers said. In addition, “In this current study, there was a change in SSI rates and a change in safety culture, but correlations between the two were negligible or weak for most domains of safety culture,” they noted. The question of sustainability of the SSI improvement without the concomitant staff support of culture change was not addressed by the investigators.
However, the results suggest that a 62% decrease is robust, and that for some hospitals with a low volume of colorectal cases, “teams could attend to iteratively reduce surgical harm beyond SSI,” the researchers wrote.
The study was supported in part by the AHRQ. Dr. Lin disclosed serving as a board member and as a paid independent contractor to the Hawaii Medical Service Association. Her coauthors had no financial conflicts to disclose.
SOURCE: Lin DM et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2018 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.031.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) designed the program to reduce surgical site infections (SSIs), which are harmful to patients and expensive for the health care system, wrote Della M. Lin, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and the department of surgery at the University of Hawaii, Honolulu, and her colleagues.
In a study published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons, the researchers reviewed data from a statewide intervention conducted at 15 hospitals in Hawaii from January 2013 to June 2015. The intervention included the Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program and individualized interventions for each hospital to help reduce SSIs. The primary outcome was the number of colorectal SSIs. A secondary outcome of hospital safety culture was assessed using the AHRQ Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture. The participating hospitals ranged from a 25-bed critical-access hospital to a 533-bed academic medical center.
Overall, the colorectal SSI rate decreased significantly (from 12% to 5%) from the first quarter of 2013 to the second quarter of 2015, with a significant linear decrease over the study period. The rate of superficial SSIs decreased significantly, falling from 8% to 3%. However, the rate of deep SSIs was not significantly different before and after the intervention program (2% vs. 0%), nor was the organ space SSI rate (3% vs. 2%). The standardized infection ratio decreased from 1.83 to 0.92.
The culture of safety in the hospitals improved, but more modestly, in 10 of 12 areas that were measured over the study period.
The overall perception of patient safety improved from 49% to 53%, teamwork across different units improved from 49% to 54%, management and support for patient safety improved from 53% to 60%, and nonpunitive response to errors improved from 36% to 40%.
In addition, communication and openness improved from 50% to 53%, frequency of reported events improved from 51% to 60%, feedback and communication about errors improved from 52% to 59%, organizational learning and continuous improvement increased from 59% to 70%, teamwork within units improved from 68% to 75%, and expectations and actions by supervisors and managers to promote safety improved from 58% to 64%. Staff responses reflect agreement on improvement in the areas of issues of communication, feedback mechanisms, and teamwork, but the change in culture was not on the order of the SSI change.
The most common interventions to reduce SSIs were the use of reliable chlorhexidine wash or wipe before surgery/surgical prep; appropriate use of antibiotics with respect to selection, dosage, and timing; standardized postsurgical debriefing; and differentiating clean/dirty/clean in the use of anastomosis trays and closing trays.
One bundle component, the implementation of the standard operating room debrief, was found to be of particular value to participants. The investigators noted that debrief questions such as “What went well?” and “What needs to be improved?” had “encouraged new processes of thinking beyond first-order problem solving. The debrief challenge embraced by the teams emphasized that ‘bundles’ did not consist of only technical interventions [e.g. clean/dirty trays, chlorhexidine gluconate wipes in preop], but embedded culture interventions—new processes for problem solving.”
The study findings were limited by several factors, such as the use of public SSI data that were not audited for accuracy and the inability to monitor the reliability of the implementation of the various interventions, the researchers said. In addition, “In this current study, there was a change in SSI rates and a change in safety culture, but correlations between the two were negligible or weak for most domains of safety culture,” they noted. The question of sustainability of the SSI improvement without the concomitant staff support of culture change was not addressed by the investigators.
However, the results suggest that a 62% decrease is robust, and that for some hospitals with a low volume of colorectal cases, “teams could attend to iteratively reduce surgical harm beyond SSI,” the researchers wrote.
The study was supported in part by the AHRQ. Dr. Lin disclosed serving as a board member and as a paid independent contractor to the Hawaii Medical Service Association. Her coauthors had no financial conflicts to disclose.
SOURCE: Lin DM et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2018 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.031.
FROM THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS
Key clinical point: Hospital participation in an Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality safety program improved safety culture and reduced surgical site infections.
Major finding: Surgical site infections among colorectal surgery patients decreased by 61.7% after the intervention.
Study details: The data come from a cohort study of 15 hospitals in Hawaii from January 2013 to June 2015.
Disclosures: The study was supported in part by the AHRQ. Dr. Lin disclosed serving as a board member and as a paid independent contractor to the Hawaii Medical Service Association. Her coauthors had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Source: Lin DM et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2018 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.031.