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Decreasing Blood Culture Contaminants in a Pediatric Emergency Department: An Interrupted Time Series Analysis.

Authors :
Mullan PC
Scott S
Chamberlain JM
Pettinichi J
Palacious K
Weber A
Payne AS
Badolato GM
Brown K
Source :
Pediatric quality & safety [Pediatr Qual Saf] 2018 Sep 19; Vol. 3 (5), pp. e104. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Sep 19 (Print Publication: 2018).
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Introduction: High peripheral blood culture contamination rates (BCCR) in the emergency department (ED) contribute to overuse and harm. This study describes 2 years of quality improvement (QI) interventions that aimed to decrease a high BCCR in a pediatric ED.<br />Methods: The QI team created a Key Driver Diagram with multiple Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. PDSA interventions included a venipuncture sterility checklist (PDSA1), phlebotomist feedback system (PDSA2), and physician ordering guidelines (PDSA3). The specific aim was to decrease the BCCR by 50% within 24 months. The secondary aim was to decrease the peripheral blood culture ordering rate (BCOR) by 10% within 24 months. The balancing measure was the proportion of pathogenic bacteremia cases at ED return visits before and after PDSA3 implementation. A financial measure estimated the savings in charges between the observed and expected contaminants in PDSA3. An interrupted time series design applied statistical process control methodology to detect special cause variations.<br />Results: The BCCR in the baseline, PDSA1, PDSA2, and PDSA3 periods were 3.02%, 2.30%, 1.58%, and 1.17%, respectively. The BCOR in the baseline, PDSA1, PDSA2, and PDSA3 periods was 4.80%, 4.26%, 3.82%, and 3.49%, respectively. Special cause variations occurred after PDSA cycle implementations for both BCCR and BCOR. There was no change in the balancing measure. The interventions were associated with an annual prevention of 95 contaminants and savings of $300,070.<br />Conclusions: Interventions that focused on improving venipuncture technique and limiting unnecessary blood cultures were associated with fewer contaminants and the achievement of the QI team's project aims.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2472-0054
Volume :
3
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Pediatric quality & safety
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30584631
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/pq9.0000000000000104