Decreasing Blood Culture Collection in Hospitalized Patients with CAP, SSTI, and UTI.

IF 1.2 Q3 PEDIATRICS Pediatric quality & safety Pub Date : 2023-12-05 eCollection Date: 2023-11-01 DOI:10.1097/pq9.0000000000000705
Monica D Combs, Danica B Liberman, Vivian Lee
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Abstract

Background: Blood culture collection in pediatric patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI), and urinary tract infections (UTI) remains high despite evidence of its limited utility. We aimed to decrease the number of cultures collected in children hospitalized for CAP, SSTI, and UTI by 25% over 11 months.

Methods: Quality improvement initiative at a children's hospital among well-appearing patients aged 2 months or more to 18 years diagnosed with CAP, SSTI, or UTI. Our primary and secondary outcomes were blood culture collection rate and positivity rate, respectively. Interventions focused on three key drivers: academic detailing, physician awareness of personal performance, and data transparency.

Results: Over the 2-year study period, there were 105 blood cultures collected in 223 hospitalized patients. Blood culture collection rates demonstrated special cause variation, decreasing from 63.5% to 24.5%. For patients with UTI, 86% (18/21) of blood cultures were negative, whereas 100% were negative for CAP and SSTI. All three patients with bacteremic UTI had a concurrent urine culture growing the same pathogen. Balancing measures remained unchanged, including escalation to a higher level of care and return to the emergency department or hospital within 14 days for the same infection.

Conclusions: A multifaceted quality improvement approach can reduce blood culture collection for hospitalized patients with CAP, SSTI, and UTI without significant changes to balancing measures. Despite the reduction achieved, the near-universal negative culture results suggest continued overutilization and highlight the need for more targeted approaches to blood culture collection.

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CAP、SSTI和UTI住院患者血液培养收集减少。
背景:在社区获得性肺炎(CAP)、皮肤和软组织感染(SSTI)和尿路感染(UTI)的儿科患者中,血培养采集率仍然很高,尽管有证据表明其效用有限。我们的目标是在11个月内将因CAP、SSTI和UTI住院的儿童收集的培养物数量减少25%。方法:在一家儿童医院对诊断为CAP、SSTI或UTI的年龄在2个月或以上至18岁的外表良好的患者进行质量改进。我们的主要和次要结果分别是血培养收集率和阳性率。干预措施侧重于三个关键驱动因素:学术细节、医生对个人表现的认识和数据透明度。结果:在2年的研究期间,共收集223例住院患者105例血培养。血培养采集率呈现特殊原因差异,从63.5%下降到24.5%。对于UTI患者,86%(18/21)的血培养为阴性,而100%的CAP和SSTI为阴性。所有三例细菌性尿路感染患者同时进行尿培养,培养出相同的病原体。平衡措施保持不变,包括升级到更高级别的护理,并在14天内因同样的感染返回急诊科或医院。结论:多方面的质量改进方法可以减少CAP、SSTI和UTI住院患者的血培养收集,而平衡措施没有明显改变。尽管实现了减少,但几乎普遍的阴性培养结果表明继续过度使用,并强调需要更有针对性的血液培养收集方法。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
20 weeks
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