Healthcare-associated
infections (HAIs) are among the leading threats to patient safety, affecting
one out of every 31 hospital patients at any one time. Over a million HAIs
occur across the U.S. health care system every year, leading to the loss of
tens of thousands of lives and adding billions of dollars to health care costs.
AHRQ's
HAI program funds work to help frontline clinicians and other health care staff
prevent HAIs by improving how care is actually delivered to patients. This work
is accomplished through a robust portfolio of grants and contracts that focus
on applied research—or research that advances the ability of clinicians in the
field to combat HAIs. This kind of research brings knowledge to the front lines
of care faster by helping clinicians and staff better understand how to apply
proven methods of making care safer. AHRQ funds both research and
implementation projects that:
·
Advance the science of HAI prevention.
·
Develop more effective approaches for reducing HAIs.
·
Help clinicians apply proven methods to prevent HAIs.
AHRQ
conducts its HAI program in accordance with the framework established by the
Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS) National
Action Plan to Prevent Health Care-Associated Infections: Road Map to
Elimination and the research agenda of the Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Action Plan.
Learn more about the HHS role in developing the Action Plan.
These
publicly-available tools and resources are based on AHRQ's research.
Tools & Resources
to Prevent HAIs
Tools
CUSP
The
Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP) combines techniques to improve
safety culture, teamwork, and communications, together with a checklist of
proven practices. The Core CUSP Toolkit was developed based on
the experiences of more than 1,000 ICUs that reduced central line-associated
blood stream infections by 41 percent. Vist the CUSP
Method for more information.
·
The Core CUSP Toolkit helps clinical teams develop a basic
understanding of how to apply the CUSP method to make health care safer.
Topic-specific toolkits provide additional resources that can help clinician
teams address targeted safety issues within the CUSP framework.
·
These tools were specifically developed to apply the CUSP method
to prevent CLABSIs.
·
This toolkit helps hospital units teach team members how to
adopt and sustain best practices to improve safety culture and
reduce CAUTI.
·
This toolkit helps hospitals make care safer for mechanically
ventilated patients in intensive care units.
·
This toolkit helps surgical units improve safety culture and
reduce surgical site infections and other complications.
·
This toolkit helps ambulatory surgery centers reduce surgical
site infections and other complications.
·
This toolkit helps nursing homes and long-term-care facilities
reduce catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) and other HAIs.
·
This ongoing implementation project aims to help hospitals
and clinicians use the CUSP method to enhance the surgical process and improve
patients' recovery after surgery.
·
This is an ongoing project to improve the use of antibiotics in
a variety of health care settings by applying the CUSP method.
·
This is an ongoing project is to reduce the rate of central
line-associated blood stream infections (CLABSI) and catheter-associated
urinary tract infections (CAUTI) in hospital intensive care units (ICUs) with
elevated rates of these infections.
This
toolkit is a resource to help clinicians and clinical informaticians in primary
care and other ambulatory settings implement and adopt the community-acquired
pneumonia (CAP) clinical decision support (CDS) alert for the management of
community-acquired pneumonia.
This
protocol provides instructions for implementing universal decolonization in
adult ICUs, as was done in the REDUCE MRSA Trial (New England Journal
of Medicine, May 29, 2013).
This
toolkit helps hospitals address breaks of Carbapenem-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), a family of bacteria that have high levels of
resistance to antibiotics. It includes resources on KPC (Klebsiella pneumoniae
carbapenemase), a potentially lethal type of CRE.
This
practical toolkit helps hospitals implement an antimicrobial stewardship
program that specifically targets C. difficile. It answers common
questions such as “Is my organization ready?” and “How do I select the right
intervention?”
This
field-tested toolkit helps dialysis centers apply proven methods to reduce HAIs
in this vulnerable patient population.
This
guide includes several toolkits and step-by-step guidance to help nursing
homes implement an antibiotic stewardship program, determine if it’s necessary
to treat a resident with antibiotics, help clinicians select the right
antibiotic, and engage residents and families in infection prevention.
This
checklist provides sequential critical steps that have shown to reduce central
line-associated infections.
Resources
Find
out how a national implementation project involving more than 1,000 hospital
units used CUSP to reduce CLABSIs by 41 percent. Read the Companion Guide to the Final Report.
Find
out how one hundred neonatal intensive care units used CUSP to reduce CLABSIs
by 58 percent.
This
analysis of case studies describes specific practices and "success
factors" for reducing and eliminating CLABSIs in health care facilities.
A June
2013 New England Journal of Medicine article reports the
results of the REDUCE MRSA trial. This three-arm, cluster-randomized
trial compared three strategies for preventing ICU infections and
found universal decolonization to be the most effective.
Universal Glove and Gown Use and
Acquisition of Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria in the ICU: A Randomized Trial 
An
October 2013 Journal of the American Medical Association article
reports the result of a cluster-randomized trial in 20 medical and
surgical ICUs in 20 hospitals that found universal glove and gown use reduced
the acquisition of MRSA but not vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus.
This
systematic review examines the comparative effectiveness of diagnostic tests,
treatments, and prevention strategies for C. difficile infections
in adults.
HAI and CARB Funding
No comments:
Post a Comment