Reducing Clostridioides difficile Infections in a Medical Intensive Care Unit: A Multimodal Quality Improvement Initiative.

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2024-07

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Abstract

Background

Clostridioides difficile (C. diff) infection causes significant morbidity for hospitalized patients. A large medical intensive care unit had an increase in C. diff infection rates.

Objectives

The aim of this project was to reduce the C. diff polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test positivity rate and the rate of C. diff PCR tests ordered. Rates were compared between preintervention (July 2017 to December 2019) and postintervention (January 2021 to December 2022) timeframes.

Methods

Unit leadership led a robust quality improvement project, including use of quality improvement tools such as A3, Gemba walks, and plan-do-study-act cycles. Interventions were tailored to the barriers identified, including standardization of in-room supply carts; use of single-packaged oral care kits; new enteric precautions signage; education to staff, providers, and visitors; scripting for patients and visitors; and use of a C. diff testing algorithm. Statistical process control charts were used to assess for improvements.

Results

The average rate of C. diff PCR test positivity decreased from 34.9 PCR positive tests per 10 000 patient days to 12.3 in the postintervention period, a 66% reduction. The average rate of PCR tests ordered was 28 per 1000 patient days in the preintervention period; this decreased 44% to 15.7 in the postintervention period.

Discussion

We found clinically significant improvements in the rate of C. diff infection and PCR tests ordered as a result of implementing tailored interventions in a large medical intensive care unit. Other units should consider using robust quality improvement methods and tools to conduct similar initiatives to reduce patient harm and improve care and outcomes.

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Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1097/dcc.0000000000000644

Publication Info

Barker, Lisa, Daniel Gilstrap, Christopher Sova, Becky A Smith and Staci S Reynolds (2024). Reducing Clostridioides difficile Infections in a Medical Intensive Care Unit: A Multimodal Quality Improvement Initiative. Dimensions of critical care nursing : DCCN, 43(4). pp. 212–216. 10.1097/dcc.0000000000000644 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31203.

This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.

Scholars@Duke

Gilstrap

Daniel Lee Gilstrap

Assistant Professor of Medicine
Reynolds

Staci Reynolds

Clinical Professor in the School of Nursing

Dr. Staci Reynolds is a Clinical Professor at Duke University School of Nursing (DUSON). At DUSON, Dr. Reynolds primarily teaches in the DNP program. Previously, she clinically served as a Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS) at Duke University Hospital within the neuroscience inpatient units and Infection Prevention and Hospital Epidemiology department. In January 2023, Dr. Reynolds was appointed the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Nursing Care Quality.  Before coming to DUSON, she was a neurocritical care nurse and a neuroscience CNS at Indiana University Health Methodist Hospital.

Dr. Reynolds received a baccalaureate degree in nursing science from Indiana University (IU) School of Nursing in Indianapolis, Indiana.  She earned a Master’s degree as a Clinical Nurse Specialist at IU in 2011, and completed her PhD at IU in May 2016.  Dr. Reynolds’ current scholarship interests include evidence-based practice implementation and evaluation, and she is an expert in quality improvement.


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