Simple Steps Can
Reduce Health Care-Associated Infections
By Carolyn M.
Clancy, M.D.
July 1, 2008
Did you know that
there is a problem in health care that causes
nearly 90,000 deaths and costs billions of
dollars to treat each year? It’s called a health
care-associated infection (HAI)and it’s
preventable. That’s why it’s getting more
attention every day.
An HAI often
happens in the hospital, where patients tend to
be very ill or are recovering from surgery. But
this kind of infection can also occur in a
doctor’s office, clinic, emergency room or
ambulatory setting. Patients who are elderly,
very young, or who have chronic diseases, such
as diabetes, also are at a high risk for getting
HAIs.
Different types
of bacteria cause HAIs. Some of the infections
are hard to get rid of once they get into a
patient’s bloodstream, even with powerful
medicines. That’s why preventing HAIs in the
first place is so important.
Hospitals in
Michigan have made great progress toward
reducing the risk of these infections. Doctors
and nurses at 103 intensive care units used a
simple checklist that reminded them of what to
do to lower the risk of infections for patients
who had central venous catheters, which are
tubes inserted into the body to give drugs or
drain fluids.
Steps on the
checklist included:
- Washing
their hands.
- Cleaning
patients’ skin with a bacteria-killing soap.
- Removing
catheters when they weren’t needed.
Doctors and
nurses stopped and reminded each other when
these practices weren’t being followed in
nonemergency situations. Medical staff talked
about catheter infections at daily and monthly
meetings.
These simple
steps had a dramatic effect. Infection rates
dropped to nearly zero shortly after these
practices were put in place. What’s more, these
improvements in reducing bloodstream infections
have continued at Michigan hospitals, saving
both lives and money.
My Agency, the
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, is
proud to have supported the research that led to
these important results. But much more work
needs to be done to protect patients from
getting HAIs.
In October, the
Federal Government will no longer pay hospitals
for the extra days that Medicare patients spend
in the hospital when they get an infection after
certain procedures. This new policy will get
everyone to focus on how to prevent HAIs rather
than on how to treat them, which often requires
expensive medicines and long hospital stays.
Many other groups
also are focused on reducing HAIs. The World
Health Organization launched a new program
called "Safe Surgery Saves Lives" that has a
goal of improving surgical care safety around
the world. My Agency, along with leading
hospital, doctor, nurse, pharmacy, and quality
groups, is a member of the Surgical Care
Improvement Project. We are working to involve
all staff in regular training to improve the
quality of care for patients, including lowered
rates of HAIs.
If you or a loved
one is having surgery, there are steps you can
take to lower the risk of getting an HAI. Like
the doctors and nurses in Michigan, make sure
you wash your hands. Ask the hospital staff to
do the same before and after they provide care,
such as changing bandages. Tell the nurse if you
notice that bandages are not clean, dry, or
attached around wounds. And tell your friends
and family members to avoid hospital visits if
they have a cold or aren’t feeling well. Don’t
be afraid to speak up.
Like many
diseases, HAIs are deadly and add billions of
dollars in health care spending. Working
together, we can eliminate many of them.
I’m Dr. Carolyn
Clancy, and that’s my advice on how to navigate
the health care system.
More Information
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Questions Are the Answer: Get More Involved
With Your Health Care
http://www.ahrq.gov/questionsaretheanswer/
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Having Surgery? What You Need to Know
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/surgery/surgery.htm
Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
CMS Proposes to Expand Quality Program for
Inpatient Hospital Services in FY 2009
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/apps/media/press/release.asp?Counter=3041
MedQIC
Surgical Care Improvement Project: Project
Information
http://www.medqic.org/dcs/ContentServer?cid=1122904930422&pagename=
Medqic%2FContent%2FParentShellTemplate&parentName=Topic&c=MQParents
World
Health Organization
Safe Surgery Saves Lives: The Second Global
Patient Safety Challenge
http://www.who.int/patientsafety/challenge/safe.surgery/en/
New
England Journal of Medicine
An Intervention to Decrease Catheter-Related
Bloodstream Infections in the ICU
http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/355/26/2725
Current as of July 2008
Internet Citation:
Simple Steps Can Reduce Health
Care-Associated Infections. Navigating the
Health Care System: Advice Columns from Dr.
Carolyn Clancy, July 1, 2008. Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD.
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/cc/cc070108.htm
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