A Quality Improvement Project to Decrease CLABSIs in Non-ICU Settings.
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2023-07
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Abstract
Background and objectives
Central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs) are a common, preventable healthcare-associated infection. In our 3-hospital health system, CLABSI rates in non-intensive care unit (ICU) settings were above the internal target rate of zero. A robust quality improvement (QI) project to reduce non-ICU CLABSIs was undertaken by a team of Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP)-prepared nurse leaders enrolled in a post-DNP Quality Implementation Scholars program and 2 QI experts. Based on a review of the literature and local root cause analyses, the QI team implemented the evidence-based practice of using 2% chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) cloths for daily bathing for non-ICU patients with a central line.Methods
A pre-post-design was used for this QI study. CHG bathing was implemented using multifaceted educational strategies that included an e-learning module, printed educational materials, educational outreach, engagement of unit-based CLABSI champions, and an electronic reminder in the electronic health record. Generalized linear mixed-effects models were used to assess the change in CLABSI rates before and after implementation of CHG bathing. CLABSI rates were also tracked using statistical process control (SPC) charts to monitor stability over time. CHG bathing documentation compliance was audited as a process measure. These audit data were provided to unit-based leadership (nurse managers and clinical team leaders) on a monthly basis. A Qualtrics survey was also disseminated to nursing leadership to evaluate their satisfaction with the CHG bathing implementation processes.Results
Thirty-four non-ICU settings participated in the QI study, including general medical/surgical units and specialty areas (oncology, neurosciences, cardiac, orthopedic, and pediatrics). While the change in CLABSI rates after the intervention was not statistically significant ( b = -0.35, P = .15), there was a clinically significant CLABSI rate reduction of 22.8%. Monitoring the SPC charts demonstrated that CLABSI rates remained stable after the intervention at all 3 hospitals as well as the health system. CHG bathing documentation compliance increased system-wide from 77% (January 2020) to 94% (February 2021). Overall, nurse leaders were satisfied with the CHG bathing implementation process.Conclusions
To sustain this practice change in non-ICU settings, booster sessions will be completed at least on an annual basis. This study provides further support for using CHG cloths for daily patient bathing in the non-ICU setting.Type
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Publication Info
Engel, Jill, Britt M Meyer, Gloria Alston McNeil, Tammi Hicks, Kalpana Bhandari, Daniel Hatch, Bradi B Granger, Staci S Reynolds, et al. (2023). A Quality Improvement Project to Decrease CLABSIs in Non-ICU Settings. Quality management in health care, 32(3). pp. 189–196. 10.1097/qmh.0000000000000375 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/29026.
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Scholars@Duke

Jill Engel
Clinical Associate- Duke University School of Nursing
Vice President - Heart & Vascular Service Line, Duke University Health System
Jill R. Engel, DNP, ACNP, FNP, ANP, NEA-BC, FAANP serves as the Vice President for the Heart & Vascular Service Line for Duke University Health System. Dr. Engel is also a Clinical Associate for Duke University School of Nursing (DUSON).
Dr. Engel has more than 25 years of acute and critical care experience and is a board certified Acute Care Nurse Practitioner, Family Nurse Practitioner and Adult Nurse Practitioner. Jill received her BS and MS in Nursing from the University of Illinois at Chicago, and her DNP and Post-Doctoral Quality Implementation Scholars Certificate from Duke University School of Nursing.
Before being named VP of the Heart & Vascular Service Line for Duke Health, Dr. Engel served in other roles at Duke including the Clinical Operations Director for Advance Practice for Heart Services, Associate Chief Nursing Officer and Director of Patient Care Services for Duke University Hospital and as the Associate Vice President for Heart Nursing, Operations and Patient Care Services for Duke University Health System.
Dr. Engel's clinical and research interests include translating and implementing evidence-based practices into the care of cardiothoracic surgery and cardiology patients in acute care settings, innovative models of care and operational efficiencies in clinical care.
Bradi Bartrug Granger
Dr. Bradi Granger is a Research Professor at Duke University School of Nursing, Director of the Duke Heart Center Nursing Research Program, and adjunct faculty at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. She is also a core faculty at the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy. Dr. Granger received her doctorate in nursing from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, her MSN from Duke University, and her BSN from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.
Dr. Granger has extensive clinical experience in cardiovascular nursing, and her clinical work as a Clinical Nurse Specialist has been dedicated to overcoming barriers to the use and conduct of research in the service setting through the development of pragmatic tools that change the way nurses learn about, apply, and conduct nursing science. She has developed an innovative model for clinical inquiry and research in the hospital setting, which has been adopted in clinical settings across the U.S. and abroad. Dr. Granger is an active member of the Council for the Advancement of Nursing Science, the American Association of Critical Care Nurses, the American Heart Association, and the European Society for Patient Adherence, Compliance, and Persistence.

Staci Reynolds
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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