Findings of the International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC), Part I: Effectiveness of a multidimensional infection control approach on catheter-associated urinary tract infection rates in pediatric intensive care units of 6 developing countries.

Journal: Infection Control And Hospital Epidemiology
Published:
Abstract

Methods: A before-after prospective surveillance study to assess the impact of a multidimensional infection control approach for the reduction of catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) rates. Methods: Pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) of hospital members of the International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC) from 10 cities of the following 6 developing countries: Colombia, El Salvador, India, Mexico, Philippines, and Turkey. Methods: PICU inpatients. Methods: We performed a prospective active surveillance to determine rates of CAUTI among 3,877 patients hospitalized in 10 PICUs for a total of 27,345 bed-days. The study was divided into a baseline period (phase 1) and an intervention period (phase 2). In phase 1, surveillance was performed without the implementation of the multidimensional approach. In phase 2, we implemented a multidimensional infection control approach that included outcome surveillance, process surveillance, feedback on CAUTI rates, feedback on performance, education, and a bundle of preventive measures. The rates of CAUTI obtained in phase 1 were compared with the rates obtained in phase 2, after interventions were implemented.

Results: During the study period, we recorded 8,513 urinary catheter (UC) days, including 1,513 UC-days in phase 1 and 7,000 UC-days in phase 2. In phase 1, the CAUTI rate was 5.9 cases per 1,000 UC-days, and in phase 2, after implementing the multidimensional infection control approach for CAUTI prevention, the rate of CAUTI decreased to 2.6 cases per 1,000 UC-days (relative risk, 0.43 [95% confidence interval, 0.21-1.0]), indicating a rate reduction of 57%.

Conclusions: Our findings demonstrated that implementing a multidimensional infection control approach is associated with a significant reduction in the CAUTI rate of PICUs in developing countries.

Authors
Victor Rosenthal, Bala Ramachandran, Lourdes Dueñas, Carlos Alvarez Moreno, J Navoa Ng, Alberto Armas Ruiz, Gulden Ersoz, Lorena Matta Cortés, Mandakini Pawar, Ata Nevzat Yalcin, Marena Rodríguez Ferrer, Ana Bran De Casares, Claudia Linares, Victoria Villanueva, Roberto Campuzano, Ali Kaya, Luis Rendon Campo, Amit Gupta, Ozge Turhan, Nayide Barahona Guzmán, Lilian De Jesús Machuca, María Corazon Tolentino, Jorge Mena Brito, Necdet Kuyucu, Yamileth Astudillo, Narinder Saini, Nurgul Gunay, Guillermo Sarmiento Villa, Eylul Gumus, Alfredo Lagares Guzmán, Oguz Dursun

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